COMPLETE WORKS OF PIR-O-MURSHID HAZRAT INAYAT KHA N ORIGINAL TEXTS : SAYINGS Part 11
1 .0
COMPLETE WORKS OF PIR-O-MURSHID HAZRAT INAYAT KHA N ORIGINAL TEXTS : SAYINGS Part I I Source Editio n
4 East-West Publication s Londonlrhe Hague
Previous volumes in this series : Biography of Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan (1979) Complete Works of Pir-o-Murshid Hazrat Inayat Khan : 1923 I, January-June (1989 ) 1923 II, July-December (1988) Sayings, Part 1 (1989 ) All books published by East-West Publications b .v., Anna Paulownastraat 78, 2518 BJ The Hagu e Š 1990 Nekbakht Foundatio n Edited by Mrs . Munira van Voorst van Beest . Published by East-West Publications in collaboration with the Nekbakht Foundation . This book is copyright under the Berne Convention . Enquiries should be addressed to EastWest Publications . No part of this book may be reproduced in any form by print, by photoprint, microfilm or any other means without written permission from the copyrightholder . ISBN 90 -5340-001-X
CONTENT S
Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .vi i
Explanation of Signs and Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . x i Part One :
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sayings published in "The Bowl of Saki ".. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3
- 85
Part Two : Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
89
Sayings hitherto unpublished . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91-19 4 Part Three :
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 7 Additional
Sayings hitherto unpublished . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199-21 1
Part Four : Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 5 Sayings published as "Aphorisms ".. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 217- 2 Part Five : Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 9 Phrases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 251-26 7
Explanation of Foreign Words
and Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 9
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 273
vi i
PREFAC E
This second volume of the above indicated series contains sayings and other words of Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan, which are presented here in the following sections : Part One : the original versions of the sayings, published end 1921/beginning 1922 as the book "The Bowl of Sdki" ; Part Two : hitherto unpublished sayings, mostly from Inayat Khan's Notebooks and partly from old MSS . ; Part Three :hitherto unpublished sayings, found in the handwriting of some of Inayat Khan's early mureeds ; Part Four : Aphorisms gathered by Mrs . Kefayat LLoyd, published in the magazine "The Sufi Quarterly" of 1927 - 1929, and then published as a stencilled booklet by Mr . Mumtaz Armstrong ;
Part Five : the Phrases given by Inayat Khan to his mureeds . The object of this series of books is threefold
:
- To safeguard for posterity the data gathered together by Nekbakht Furnee, pupil and secretary of Inayat Khan, to whom he entrusted this task ; - To serve as the basis for future publications and translations ; - To make the original versions of Inayat Khan's words available to students and other persons interested .
Among the old documents found in the archives, those showing the original texts of the sayings and their elaborations are far from complete . For this reason it is not always possible to understand by whom, when and why different versions or alterations in the texts were made .
Key to_the_Presentation of-Parts-One-and-Two . First column
: "Origin and elaborations" .
Here is indicated where or in what form the saying first appeared and what transformations it underwent . Each saying can be studied separately . Each item (a, b, c, d etc .) deals with one and the same document, with a simultaneously dictated text or/ and with identical versions .
Note 1) : For the explanation of signs and abbreviations see separate list on pages VII and VIII .
viii
Cont . First Column . a)
.
. If known, the year of Inayat Khan's pocket notebooks (Notebooks) is mentioned .
.
"Reported" means taken down in shorthand or longhand while Inayat Khan's lectures were given by him . a) or b) "MS ." ("MSS .") denotes a handwritten text taken down from Inayat Khan's dictation, or a copy of this dictated text in the handwriting of the same person . '*Copied" indicates all handwritten texts other than MSS" . A copied text may show additions, omissions and/or corrections . There are various kinds of copied texts . One part might be a "MS ." but it is uncertain ; another .part was copied for an evident purpose, e .g . for classification, as were most of the texts in Ek .'s, Sh .'s, Mt .'s and Kf .'s handwriting . "Copied from (?)" always seems to be an early version, and is nearer to the original text than those called copied only . It points to one or more 'missing links' . In many cases it might well be a copy of a dictated text in the handwriting of the same person, but insufficient indications or even the absence of indications would not justify the appellation "MS . " . 7 orobabl from her own MS ." iE02 Copied b a shade o meaning slightly differen t from "MS ." . .
.
. Classification . 1 ) Close attention was given by Inayat Khan to the classification, especially of the sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" and the "Vadan" . Sometimes, however, classified sayings have not been inserted in the "Gayan", "Vadan" or "Nirtan" . In such cases they can be found in Part Two of this book, as hitherto unpublished sayings .
Second _co,umQ
: "Different versions" .
Only the words found in the archives are reproduced in this column . They are the various versions known, given in chronological order as far as this could be deduced from the available documents . There are instances, however, that a version goes back to an earlier MS . or cooy, indicated under a previous item of the first column instead of being copied from the one last mentioned .
Note 1) : See also Sayings I : page XVI under Classification .
i x
Differences from the previous version are underlined and identical words are indicated by dashes . However, identical words are written out where necessary to indicate the placement of words in an altered sequence, and the published version is written out in full . The difference indicated by line under a word may be an addition, an omission or an alteration (but if only an alteration in the sequence, it is not underlined if the meaning was not changed) . The extensive index is a word index, in which only words of minor importance have been omitted . Because of its extensiveness, moreover, it can be used as a subject index as well . In conclusion, I wish to express my gratitude to those Sufi friends who have offered advice and suggestions and co-operated by their valuable assistance in preparing this basic work . Munira van Voorst van Beest April, 198 1 P r e f a c e to second editio n Since the first printing of this book was sold out more than two years ago, we have prepared a new edition for inclusion in the series the Complete Works of Pir-o-Murshid Hazrat Inayat Khan . This has also provided an opportunity to make extensive revisions to include material which has come to light during the last eight years . The sources of many of the sayings in "The Bowl of Saki", not known at the time of the first printing, have now been discovered . In some cases those sayings were taken from books by Sherifa Goodenough or Zohra Williams ; in all such cases, the sayings have been put in italics in this edition to indicate that, while inspired by the teachings of Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan, they are not his actual words . Other sayings have been found to have come from the lectures and classes given in the London Centre from 1917 to 1920 . Where appropriate, these have been indicated in the "Origin" column as coming from the stencilled material of the "Old London Course" . The response to our request for help in searching for the origins of sayings has allowed us to make some headway, especially with regard to the Aphorisms . A list of already identified sources has been added to the Introduction to the Aphorisms (p . 215) . We greatly appreciate the interest of readers in this project, and hope that they will continue to send us whatever they uncover . Munira van Voorst van Beest Sharif Graha m Staff Members of the Foundation "Nekbakht Stichting " 34, rue de la Tuilerie 92150 Suresnes, France October, 1989
EXPLANATION OF SIGNS AND ABBREVIATIONS . a), b), c) etc .
xi
indicates the presumed sequence of the stage s through which the sayings went . In the case of Part One, the last item , which is the sayings published in "The Bowl of SAki", may deviate from this rule and chronologically precede instead of follow the previous one(s) .
Notebooks
=
Inayat Khan ' s pocket notebooks .
MS . (MSS . ) (manuscript(s) - a handwritten text, taken down from Inayat Khan's dictation , or a copy of such dictated text in the handwriting of the same person . Copied = all handwritten texts other than MSS . Copied texts may show additions, omissions and/ or corrections . Copied from (?) = an early version, nearer to the original text than the one called "copied" only . Copied by . . . probably from her o r his own MS . = a shade of meaning slightly different from "MS", expressed by the word 'probably' . Classified = placed by Inayat Khan in a definite categor y such as 'SUr(a)', 'Bol(a)', 'AlankAr(a)' etc . Ed .
=
Add .
edition,
=
Corr .
=
added,
edited,
editor .
addition(al) .
corrected, correction ; a rectification of mostly grammatical errors .
Changed , Change( s) = replacement of a word (words ) by another word (words ) or an idea expressed in a different way . Altered, Alteration(s) = slightly changed . Cf .
=
compare .
- - - - - = quotation of the previous version . Etc . is used when a previous version of more than one line is quoted . --------- = cancellation of a word by Inayat Khan or b y one of the hereafter mentioned mureeds in their own MSS . or copies . . . . . = a word or words missing . underlined words indicate differences as compared to the previously quoted version (addition, alteration, omission) . If a comparison is made with another version than the previously quoted one, this is mentioned in the first column . No comparison is made with a previous version if it shows many differences . The category of Inayat Khan's classification of a saying has been underlined, even if this same word already appears in the preceding version . - Names -
Xii
Names of mureeds in whose handwriting the texts were found in the archives of the Nekbakht Foundation : Mr . Mumtaz Armstrong . Miss
Kitty Belfrage .
Mrs .
Nuria Best .
Miss
Joyce
Dr .
O .C . Gruner .
1 2
Burnett .
1
Begum Inayat Khan . 1 (Begum Ora Baker, Amina ) Miss
Reza Jones .
Miss H . Lefdbvre . Mrs .
Rabia Martin .
Miss
(Mrs .?) Iris Reelfs .
1
Sada runy . (It is not known who was the person signin g with this name ) Names of mureeds in whose handwriting the texts were found i n the archives , used in this book in an abbreviated form : Al .
Miss Angela Alt .
Ek .
Mrs . Ekbal Dawla van Goens - van Beyma .
1
Fm .
Mrs . Fazal Mai Egeling .
Gd .
Miss Sherifa Goodenough .
1
Gr .
Miss Sophia Saintsbury Green .
Kf .
Mrs . Kefayat LLoyd .
Km .
Miss Kismet Stam .
Mc .
Mrs . Marya Cushing .
Mf .
Mr . Musheraff Khan .
Mt .
Mrs . Mahtab van Hogendorp .
Ng .
Miss Nargis Dowland .
Sd .
Mrs . Saida van Tuyll van Serooskerken Willebeek le Mair .
Sh .
Mrs . Shadi Maheboob Khan - van Goens .
1 1
1
1 1
1
1 1
3
Sk .
Miss Sakina (Nekbakht) Furnee .
Sr .
Mr . Sirdar van Tuyll van Serooskerken .
1
Sw .
Miss Salima Wiseman .
Zr .
Miss Zohra Williams 1 /Mrs . Kamila van Spengler Schneider .
1
4
Notes : 1 . indicates that particulars about the persons mentioned can be found in the Biography of Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan , East- West Publications : London and The Hague, 1978 . 2 . a mureed to whom Ng . after 1927 dictated from sayings and words which she had received from Inayat Khan . 3 . see Biography of Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan, under Mr . Maheboob Khan . 4 . see the Complete Works of Pir-o-Murshid Hazrat Inayat Khan , Sayings , Part I , page viii .
P A R T O N E
SAYINGS PUBLISHED IN "THE BOWL
OF SAKI" .
Part One contains the sayings published in the book "The Bowl of Saki" . In its first edition it has the following sub-title : "Thoughts for daily contemplation collected from the sayings and teachings of Pir 0 Murshid Inayat Khan by one of his pupils" . The book was published at Southampton at the end of 1921 or perhaps at the beginning of 1922 by the Sufi Book Depot (formerly The Sufi Publishing Society) . The pupil who collected the sayings most probably was Miss Sophia Saintsbury Green and the book was brought out by Miss Dowland (Hargis) . A letter by Miss Dowland to Inayat Khan, kept in the archives of the Nekbakht Foundation, gives some interesting particulars about "The Bowl of Saki" when in its printing stage . The following lines may be quoted : Southampton, 14 .11 .2 1 "Revered and Beloved Murshi d Miss Green has written to ask you to write something for the Magazine . I hope I am in time to ask you to please also add a few words asking all your mureeds to ge t a copy of "The Bowl of Saki" and read it daily so that we may all be united in the same thought .all over the world . This will also help to sell it . The cost of printing will be double the amount of the first estimate and I shall have to find nearly ÂŁ 110 . So we must sell a lot or I shall find it rather difficult . I am sure it will sell in time but one has to Pay ready money and wait for the return . I hope to have some copies ready by the end of the month but am afraid not in time for Geneva . " In a Quarterly Magazine for seekers after Truth : "Sufism" of December 1921, edited by Miss S . Green, the publication of "The Bowl of Saki" is announced by the Ed ., saying that it will be ready for a Christmas present, and that it is "a collection of some of the most striking and arresting sayings of Pir-o-Murshid, arranged in the form of a daily text-book" . So there is a saying for each day of the year ; the date is mentioned first and then follows the saying - three sayings on one Page . The following documents, found in the archives, can be considered as the sources of these sayings : Inayat Khan's Notebook of 1914/1915, his Notebooks of 192 1 and some others of his Notebooks ; MSS . and copied texts in the handwriting of some British mureeds amongst whom Miss Green, Miss Dowland, Miss Goodenough, Miss Alt and Mrs . LLoyd ; lectures given by Inayat Khan in England in the years 1918 1920, reported and revised by Dr . O .C . Gruner as publishe d in "In an Eastern Rosegarden" 1st ed . (1920/1921) and other lectures, mainly those given in the years 1920 and 1921, also undated ones, found in the handwriting of Mrs . Nuria Best, Miss Reza Jones, Miss Joyce Burnett and other early mureeds . Sentences from these lectures were taken and turned into sayings . As some 26 sayings have their origin in the lecture "Truth" of 13th May 1921, the information under the different items in the left column may be explained a little more extensively . This lecture was found in the handwriting of Nuria Best , - most -
4 Cont . Introduction to Part One .
most probably copied by her from her own reporting, and also in the handwriting of Miss R . Jones, which could be copied from it, with some corrections, however, and somewhat shortened . Both versions seem to be very near to the originally spoken words . - A typewritten copy found in the archives, gives a revised version of the lecture "Truth", likely to have been made from the above mentioned versions ; it is not known by whom . In many cases the revised version was used for publication in "The Bowl of Saki" . A number of sayings were as it seems already set apart for publication in the "Gayan" at an early stage . A part of these, however, was first published in "The Bowl of Saki" and one and a half year later again in the "Gayan", while others appeared only in "The Bowl of Saki" . Most of the sayings originally intended for the "Gayan", were found in Gd .'s handwriting and/or typed out by her or sometimes by another person on her request . There are also sayings already classified by Inayat Khan for publication in the "Gayan", but then appearing in "The Bowl of Saki" instead . Then there are sayings published in "The'Bowl of SSki", which afterwards were published in the "Gayan" in a somewhat different version giving a different meaning to it . As the documents with sayings published in "The Bowl of Saki" compared to the documents with sayings for "Gayan" and "Vadan" consist of a greater number of typed copies and less MSS . ,
on the whole there is more uncertainty about the different elaborations of these sayings . The sayings of which no sources could as yet be traced, may still be found as sentences in the book "In an Eastern Rosegarden" and in other lectures given before September 1921 . As also asked in the Preface of the book Sayings I of this same series, the assistance of those who read and study Inayat Khan's words in helping to find the origin of sayings taken from his lectures, will be most valuable for a more complete future edition of this book .
5 ORIGIN
and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in the chapter "The Truth" in "A Sufi Message of Spiritual Liberty", 1914 .
As water in a fountain flows as one stream, but falls in many drops, divided by time and space, so are the revelations of the one stream of Truth .
b)
As water in a fountain flows as one stream, but falls in many drops_ divided by time and space, so are the revelations of the one stream of truth .
1 St ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 1st January .
No documents referring to the sayings under 2nd 5th January have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 2nd January .
All names and forms are the garbs and covers, under which the One Life is hidden .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 3rd January .
Truth without a veil is always uninteresting to the human mind .
1st ed . "The Bowl'of Saki" - 4th January .
When sun, when your
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 5th January .
No one has seen God and lived . To see God we must be non-existent .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
you stand with your back to the your shadow is before you ; but you turn and face the sun, then shadow falls behind you .
Bola . Truth cannot be spoken and what is spoken is not necessarily the . Truth .
b) Copied by Ng . from (?) .
The T ru th cannot be spoken and the spoken word-is not necessaril y true .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 6th January .
The Truth cannot be spoken can be spoken is not
; that which the Truth .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'What a Mystic wants to attain', 11th June 1921, in handwriting M .lle Lefebvre (a reporting of the simultaneous translation in French) and annotations in English made by Sr .
Le mystique comprend que son pouvoir rdside dans l'amour, c'est le pouvoir de l'amour .
b) Copied by Gd . and originally meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
The only power for the mystic is the . power of love .
c) An old typewritten copy .
- - - - power of . the - - - - - etc .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 7th January .
The only power for power of love .
this desire of power - the mystic understands - must become the power of love
the mystic is the
5
6 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in the lec- Did they1) but know their own religion, ture 'Nature's Religion' how tolerant they would become, and how (1918-1920), reported free from any grudge against the religand revised by Dr . O . ion of others : Gruner as published in 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of If people but knew their own religion, Saki" - 8th January . how tolerant they would become, and how free from any grudge against the religion of others . Note 1) : 'they' refers to the word 'people', mentioned in the previous sentence .
a)
From a lecture 'The Freedom of the Soul', 11 Feb . 1917, published in 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1920/1921
The real meaning of crucifixion is t o crucify this false self, and so resur rect the true self . As long as th e false self is not crucified, the tru e self is still not realised .
b)
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 9th January .
The real meaning of Crucifixion is to crucify the false self that the true self may rise . As long as the fals e self is not crucified the true sel f is not realised7
a)
b)
In handwriting Miss Kitty Belfrage, dictated to her by Ng .
An ideal is beyond explanation . To analyse God is to de-throne God .
1st ed . "The Bowl of
An ideal is beyond explanation .
Saki" - 10th January .
To analyse God is to dethrone God .
No documents referring to the sayings under 11th - 18th January have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki " - 11th January . 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki " - 12th January .
6
where the flame of love rises, the knowledge of God unfolds of itself . Peace is perfected activity ; that is perfect which is complete in all its aspects, balanced in each direction and under complete control of the will .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 13th January
Do not limit God to your virtue . He is beyond your virtues, Oh : pious ones :
1st ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 14th January
A man's inclination is the root of the tree of his life .
7 ORIGIN and elaborations : 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 15th January .
DIFFERENT VERSIONS : Yes, teach your principles of good, but do not think to limit God within them . The goodness of each man is peculia r
to himself . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 16th January .
To learn to adopt the standard of God, and to cease to wish to make the world conform to one's own standard of good is the chief lesson of relicrion .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 17th January .
Thought draws the line of fate .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 18th January .
Mis-belief alone misleads ; singlemindedness always leads to the goal .
a) Notebook 1914/1915
: A king in spirit is always a king, is he crowned with jewels or he be cladded with rags .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of A King is ever a King, be he crowned Saki" - 19th January . with a jewelled crown or clad i n beggar's garb .
No documents referring to the sayings under 20th - 25th January have been found i n the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of To treat every human being as a shrine Saki" - 20th January . of God is to fulfil all religion . 1st ed . "The Bowl of The wise man should keep the balance Saki" - 21st January . between love and power . Should keep the love in his nature ever increasing and expanding, and at the same time strengthen the will so that the heart may not easily be broken . 1st ed . Saki" -
:'The Bowl of 22nd January .
Failure comes when will surrenders t o reason .
1st ed .
"The Bowl of
Success comes when reason (the store o f
Saki " - 23rd January .
experience )
1st ed . Saki" -
"The Bowl of 24th January .
There is an answer to every call ; thos e who call on God, to them God comes .
1st ed . saki" -
"The Bowl of 25th January .
He who thinks against his own desire , he is his own enemy .
a) Notebook
1914/1915
:
surrenders to will .
Brain speaks through words, heart speak s through a kind glance, and soul speak s Cont .
a)
7
8
ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) through the breath that radiates light and life and charges the whole atmosphere with magnetism . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The brain speaks through words ; the Saki" - 26th January . heart in the glance of the eyes ; and the soul through a radiance that charges the whole atmosphere magnetising all .
a) MS . Gr . together with other sayings meant to be Published in the "Gayan" .
Bola . Love is the merchandise which all the world demands ; if you store it in the heart every soul will become your customer .
b) Copied by mt . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Chal' .
Chala . - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 27th January .
Love is the merchandise which all the world demands ; if you store it in your heart.- every soul will become your customer .
a) Notebook 1914/1915
: She is a precious pearl that forms in the shell of heart and is found in the soil of the spirit, and that i s sincerity .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Sincerity is the jewel that forms in Saki" - 28th January . the shell of the hear t Cf . Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 40 .
a) Notebook 1914/1915
:
Saying . There is no worse poverty than selfpity .
A sentence in the lecture 'The Privilege of being human', 24th May 1921 at Southampton, in Kitty Belfrage's handwriting . She copied it from Ng .
Selfpity is the worst poverty, and it is the source of all unhappiness .
A sentence in the lecture 'The Privilege of being human', 20th June 1921 in Switzerland (Social Gatheka no .16) . Fragments and sentences of this lecture were reported by Sr . and a copy in Gd .'s handwrit-
Self-pity is the worst noverty, it overwins man and he sees nothing as its own troubles and Pains .
8
Cont . a)
9 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS : .
Cont . a) ing, could well be a reporting . The third sentence under a) was found in Gd .' s handwritten copy of this lec-
Selfpity is the worst poverty ; it overwhelms man and he sees nothing but _ illness, trouble, and pain
ture . b) Copied by Gd . together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gay an" .
Selfpity is the worst poverty . It overwhelms mand and he sees nothing but his own troubles and pains .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl : .of Saki" - 29th January .
Self-pity is the worst poverty ; it overwhelms man until he sees nothing but illness, trouble and pain-
No documents referring to the sayings under 30th and 31st January have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of The heart'is not living until it has Saki" - 30th January . experienced pain . 1st ed . The Bowl of The pleasures of life are blinding ; Saki" - 31st January . it is love alone that clears the rust from the heart, the mirror of the soul .
No documents referring to the sayings under 1st February have been found in the archive s to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of The pain of love is the dynamite that Saki" - 1st February . breaks up the heart, even if it be as hard as a rock .
a) From a book,'Love, Human and Divine', by Sherifa Lucy Goodenough, published In 1919, p . 33 .
Our virtues are made of love, and our sins are caused by its lack .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 2nd February
Our virtues are made LZ love, and our sins are caused by the lack of it .
10 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
No documents referring rd to the sayings under 3 - 6th February have been found in th e
archives to date . 1st ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 3rd February .
Love is the essence of all religion , mysticism and philosophy .
ISt ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 4th February .
The fire of devotion purifies the heart of the devotee, and leads unt o spiritual freedom.
Note : = duplica ted under l7the June . 1st ed . "The Bowl of
Mysticism without devotion is lik e
Saki" - 5th February .
uncooked food, it can never b e
assimilated . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 6th February .
He who stores evil in his heart canno t see beauty .
a) A sentence in "A Sufi Message of Spiritual Liberty", The Personal Being, p .20, 1st ed . 1914 .
The wise man, by studying Nature enter s into the unity through its variety, an d realises the personality of Allah b y sacrificing that of his own .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 7th February .
The wise man, by studying nature, enters into unity through its variety, an d realizes the Personality of God by sacrificing his own .
No documents referrin g to the sayings under 8th February have been foun d in the archives to date .
1 St ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 8th February .
Love manifests towards those whom w e like as love ; towards those whom we d o not like as forgiveness .
a) A sentence in "A . . . it is love which has brought Man from Sufi Message of the world of unity to the world of Spiritual Liberty", variety, and the same force again can Love, p .29, 1st ed . take him to that world of unity from 1914 . that of variety . b) 1st ed . The Bowl of Love brought man from the of variety, Saki" - 9th Febru- world of unity to that and the same force can take him bac k ary . again to the world of unity from the world of variety .
10
10 A ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) From a book "A Whoever knows the mystery of vibrations, Sufi Message of indeed knows all things . Spiritual Liberty", Manifestation, p .44, 19 14 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Whoever knows the mystery of vibrations Saki" - 10th Febru- indeed knows all things . ary .
a) A sentence in "A Sufi Message of Spiritual Liberty", Interest and Indifference, p .45, 1st ed . 1914 .
He who arrives at the state of indiffer ence without experiencing interest i n life is incomplete, and apt to be tempte d by interest at any moment ; but he wh o arrives at the state of indifference b y going through interest, really attain s the blessed state .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of SAki" - 11th February .
He who arrives at the state of indifference without experiencing interest i n life is incomplete and apt to be tempte d by interest at any moment ; but he wh o arrives at the state of indifference b y going through interest really attain s the blessed state .
a) A sentence in "A Sufi Message of Spiritual Liberty", Intellect and Wisdom, p .48, 1st ed . 1914 .
Wisdom is greater and more difficult to attain than intellect, piety or spirituality .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 12th February .
Wisdom is greater and more difficult to attain than intellect, piety or spirituality .
a) A sentence in "A Wisdom is consciousness in its pure Sufi Message of essence, which is not necessarily Spiritual Liberty", dependent upon the knowledge of names Prophets, p .33, and forms . 1st ed . 1914 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of wisdom is intelligence in its pure Saki" - 13th Febru- essence, which is not necessarily ary . dependent upon the knowledge of name s and forms .
10A
10B O RIGIN
and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in "A Sufi Message of Spiritual Liberty", Law of Action, p .50, 1st ed . 1914 .
Man forms his future by his actions . His every good and bad action spread s its vibrations and becomes known throughout the universe .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 14th February .
Man forms his future by his actions ; his every good or bad action spread s its vibrations and becomes know n throughout the universe .
a) A sentence in "A The Universe is like a dome, i t Sufi Message of vibrates that which you say in it, and Spiritual Liberty", answers the same back to you . So also Law of Action, p .51 is the law of action, we reap what we sow . 1st ed . 1914 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The Universe is like a dome ; i t Saki" - 15th Febru- vibrates to that which you say in it, and ary . answers the same back to you ; so als o is the law of action, we reap what we sow .
No documents referring to the sayings under 16th - 18th February have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . The Bowl of We are always searching for God afar Saki" - 16th February . off, when all the while He is nearer to us than our own soul . 1st ed . The Bowl of Concentration and contemplation are Saki" - 17th February . great things ; but no contemplation i s greater than the life we have about us every day . 1st ed . "The Bowl of He who expects to change the world Saki" - 18th February . will be disappointed, he must chang e his view . When this is done, then tolerance will come, forgiveness will come, and there will be nothing he cannot bear .
10B
11 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A Passage in an early, There are two renunciations : the renuntypewritten version of ciation by mastery and the renunciation the third lesson of a by weakness . When you have picked an Course on 'The Law of apple from the tree and thought it is Attainment' which in a sour, you don't want to eat it, it is revised form became mastery . But when you could not pick e Gita Sadhana . the acole and said : "it is sour, no us bothering' - then it is a weakness . b) A sentence in an undated To renounce what we cannot gain is not lecture 'The Way of true renunciation, it is weakness . Attainment' in Gd .' s handwriting . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of To renounce what we cannot gain is not . Saki" - 19th February . true renunciation, it is weakness
a) Copied by Mt . from (?) . The religion of each one is the attainment of his soul's desire . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The religion of each one is the attainSAki" - 20th February . ment of his soul's desire ; when he is on the path of that attainment he is religious, when he is off that oath then he is irreligious, impious .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Reformer comes to prepare the ground . The Prophet comes to throw the seed, and the priest comes to take the crop .
b) Copied by Gd . from (?) . The reformer comes to plough the ground, the Prophet comes to sow the seed , and then the priest eemes to 4-ake reap the eree harvest . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The reformer comes to plough the ground ; Saki" - 21st February . the prophet comes to sow the seed ; and the Priest comes to rear) the harvest .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Life is an opportunity to satisfy the hunger and thirst of our soul .
b) Copied by Gd . from (?)
Life is an opportunity given to - - - - - - - - - - - - of the soul .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Life is an opportunity given to satisfy Saki" - 22nd February . the hunger and thirst of the soul . Cf . Sayings I : "Gayan" - Chala 124 .
11
12 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
1st ed . "The Bowl of Truth alone can succeed ; falsehood is Saki" - 23rd February . a waste of time and loss of energy . Note : For complete elaborations and different versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Chala 84 .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Do not fear God, but consciously regard Saki" - 24th February . His pleasure and disoleasure . Note : For complete elaborations and different versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 56 .
1st ed . "The Bowl of He who has failed himself, has failed Saki" - 25th February . all ; he who has conquered himself has won all . Note : For complete elaborations and different versions see Savings I : "Gayan" - Tala 16 .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . As man rises above passion he begins to know what is love . b) Copied in an unidentiSaying . fied handwriting, prob- - - - - - - - - - -passion, so he - etc . ably from a MS . Ng . In Ng .'s handwriting was added 'Saying' over it . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of As man rises above passion, so he beSaki" - 26th February . gins to know what is love .
a) Notebook 1914/1915 Notebooks
:
:
b) MS . Gr . in which the first sentence under a) appears .
Simplicity with intelligence is th e sign of saints . Saying . Innocence with intelligence is a tru e sign of spirituality . Bola . Believe in God with childlike faith ; oar simolicity with intelligence is th e sign of the Holy Ones .
A typewritten versio n with Bolas to be oub lished in the "Gavan " (Gd .'s bookoreparation) . c) A later typewritten ver sion gives b) as Bolas I, but then, probably by Gd ., the sentence was divided into two sen-
tences . 12
Bola . Believe in God with childlike faith . S implicity with intelligence is th e sign of the Holy Ones . d)
13 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
d) Copied by Mt . and by Kf . as two sentences . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
e) Copied by Ek . from (? ) the second sentence Innocence with intelligence is under a) . sign of spirituality . f) Again copied by Ek . Sura . and classified by - - - - - - - - - - - Inayat Khan as 'Sur' , originally meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
the
true
.
An annotation in Mc .'s handwriting : 'same as : 'Believe in God with etc .' The words 'Innocence' and 'soirituality' were put between brackets so that the version, as changed b y Mc ., became : Believe in God with childlike faith, for simplicity with intelligence is the true sign of the Holy Ones . g) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Believe in God with childlike faith ; Saki" - 27th February . for simplicity with intelligence is the sign of the Holy Ones . Cf . Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 171 .
1st ed . "The Bowl of • Saying . Saki" - 28th February . He who can live up to his ideal is the king of life and who cannot live up to it is its slave . Note : For complete, elaborations and different versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 10 .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Every moment in life is an invaluable opportunity given to make life worth while ; who disregards this has lost his chance ; who considers this has gained .
b) Copied in an uniden- Saving . tified handwriting, Every moment of our life is an invaluprobably from MS . Ng . able opportunit y In Ng .'s handwriting was added 'Saying' over it . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Every moment of our life is an invaluSaki" - 29th February . able opportunity . Cf . Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 132 and Chala 136 .
13
14 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Notebooks 1921
Saying . Nature sneaks louder than the call from the minaret .
:
b) Copied in an unidentified handwriting, probably from MS . Ng . In Ng .' s handwriting was added ' Saying' over it .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki " - 1st March .
Nature speaks louder than the call from the Minaret .
a)
Notebooks 1921
Saying . The priest gives the benediction o f the church and the branches bending , give the blessing of God .
b)
Copied in an unidentified handwriting, probably from MS . Ng . In Ng .'s handwriting
Saying . The priest gives a benediction fro m the church . The branches of th e tree in bending_ give Y blessin g
was added 'Saying' over
from God .
:
it . c)
d)
A typewritten copy with
Saying .
sayings, mostly meant
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
for publication in the "Gayan" .
- - church; the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -give a blessin g
1st ed . "The Bowl of SSki" - 2nd March .
The Priest gives a benediction fro m the Church ; the branches of th e tree in bending give _ blessin g from God .
a) Notebooks 1921
14
:
Saying . The soul brings its light from th e heaven and mind acquires its knowledg e on earth, therefore when soul believe s readily in a thing the mind doubts .
b) Copied in an unidentified handwriting, probably from MS . Ng ., in whose handwriting was added 'Saying' over it .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - - fro m Heaven, the mind - - - - knowledg e from earth, therefore when the sou l believes readily the mind may still doubt .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 3rd March .
The soul brings its light fro m Heaven . The mind acquires its knowledg e from earth ; therefore, when the sou l believes readily, the min d may still doubt .
15 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
No documents referrin g to the sayings under 4th and 5th March have been found in the archive s to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Those who throw dust to the sun, the Saki" - 4th March . dust falls in their own eyes . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 5th March .
Man creates his own disharmony .
a) A passage in the . lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's and in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
The heart is the shrine of God and when the doors of the shrine are close d it is just like a light being hidde n under a bushel . The pupil sees tha t God is love . If He is love He does no t stay in the heavens . His earth body is the heart of man and when tha t heart is frozen and there is no love , but bitterness, coldness and prejudic e and contempt, and unforgiving feelings , hatred etc . . . . . . . .
b) A typewritten cony .
The heart - - - - -• - - - - - - - etc . - - - - bushel . The Bible say s "God is love" . If He loves He does not stay in the sky- His real abode is the heart of man and when th e
heart is frozen with bitterness , coldness,
resentment and hatred
. . . . . . .
c) Copied by Mt .
The real abode of God is in the hear t of man .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 6th March . Versions b) and c) .
The real abode of God is in the hear t man ; when it is frozen with bitternes s or hatred, the doors of the shrine ar e closed ; the light is hidden .
No documents referring to the saying under 7th March have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of It is a false love that does not Saki" - 7th March . uproot man's claim of "I" ; the firs t and last lesson of love is "I am not" .
a) Part of a sentence in You cannot be horse and rider at the the lecture 'Truth', same time , 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting . b) In Miss R .Jones's hand- You cannot be a horse and a rider at the same time . writing .
c)
15
16 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
c) A typewritten cop y
You cannot be the horse and the rider .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 8th March .
You cannot be both horse and rider at the same time .
a) Part of a sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting .
It is more important to find the truth about oneself than to find the truth about heaven or hell ,
b) In Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
It is more important to find out the truth about one's self, than to find the truth about Heaven and or hell,
c) A typewritten copy .
It is more imoortant to discover the truth about self , than to find out the truths of Heaven and hell .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of It is more important to know the truth Saki" - 9th March . about one's self than to try to fin d out the truth of Heaven and H ell . Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" under 26th October .
16
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's and Miss R . Jones's handwriting ; also a typewritten copy .
Every man's pursuit is according to his state of evolution .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 10th March .
Every man's pursuit is according to his evolution .
a) Notebooks 1921
Bola . Man does not see beyond what he sees .
:
b) A typewritten cony with sayings, over which Gd . wrote "Gayan" . In the margin she wrote : 'where?' (Gd .'s bookoreoaration) .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - - what he can see .
c) Another typewritten copy with sayings under the heading 'Bola I', mostly meant for publication in the "Gavan" (Gd .'s bookoreoaration) .
Bola .
d) Copied by mt . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Bola' .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - -
e)
17 ORIGIN
and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
e) A sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting and a tyaewritten version . (compared to version a)) .
Man always sees what he sees, beyond it he cannot see .
f) A sentence in the same lecture as under e), in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
Man just sees what he sees, beyond that he cannot see .
g) 1st ed . "The Bowl of SAki" - 11th March .
Man sees what he sees_ beyond it he cannot see .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting .
The source of realizing the truth is within man, but man is the object of his realization .
b) A sentence in the same lecture as under a), in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - but that man himself is the - - - - - - .
c) A typewritten copy .
The source of realization of Truth is within man . He himself is the-
d)
1st ed . "The Bowl of The source of truth is Saki" - 12th March . within man ; he himself is the objec t of his realization . Cf . The Bowl of Saki" under 24th October .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting .
As life unfolds itself to man, the first lesson that it teaches is humility .
b) A sentence in the same lecture as under a), in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - lesson that it should teach humility .
c) A typewritten version .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - lesson he learns is humility .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 13th March .
As life unfolds itself to man, the first lesson he learns is humility .
is
a) A sentence in the lec- God is Truth - Truth is God . ture 'Truth', 13th Ma y 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting .
b)
17
18 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) A sentence in the same lecture as under a), in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
God is Truth and Truth is God .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 14th March .
God is Truth ; and Truth is God .
No documents referring to the saying under 15th March have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Until man loses himself in the vision Saki" - 1.5th March . of God, he cannot be said to really live .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting and a typewritten version .
At every step of evolution the realization of man changes .
b) A sentence in the same lecture as under a), in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
At every stage of man's realization changes .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 16th March .
At every step of evolution, man's realization of God changes .
evolution his
1st ed . "The Bowl of Verily he is victorious who has Saki" - 17th March . conquered himself . Note : For origin, complete elaborations and different versions, see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Sura 21 .
18
a) Part of a sentence in the address to mureeds : 'Prayer', 8th May 1921, given in the first Service of the Church of All in London (Religious Gatheka I, 5, which afterwards became no .8), in Joyce Burnett's handwriting .
and morally speaking, prayer is the greatest virtue and the only way of being free from all sin .
b) The same sentence as under a ) in an unidentified handwriting . Also oublished in the Magazine 'Sufism' of March 1922 .
Prayer is a great virtue and is the only way of being free from all sin .
c)
19 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 18th March .
Prayer is the greatest virtue .- - _ the only way of being free from al l sin .
a) A sentence in the address to mureeds : 'Prayer', 8th May 1921, given in the first Service of the Church of All in London, in Joyce Burnett's handwriting .
It is the sincere devotee of God, who knows best what feeling it is to humble oneself to God .
b) A typewritten copy of the same sentence as under a) (Religious Gatheka I, 5, which afterwards was changed into no . 8) .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - of God_ who - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -oneself before God .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 19th March .
It is the sincere devotee _ who knows best _ how to humble himself bed GoAT
1st ed . "The Bowl of It is wise to see all things, and yet Saki" - 20th March . to turn our eyes from all that should be overlooked . Note : For complete elaborations and different versions, see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Tala 22 .
a) Part of a sentence in our soul is blessed with the the address to mureeds : impression of the glory of Go d 'Prayer', 8th May 1921, evening (Religious Gatheka I, 10, which afterwards became no . 9) in Joyce Burnett's handwriting, to which was added in Gd .'s handwriting : whenever we praise Him . b)
The same sentence as under a) in an unidentified handwriting . Also a typewritten copy .
our soul is blessed with the impression of the Glory of God whenever we praise Him .
c)
1s ted . "The Bowl of our soul is blessed with the Saki" - 21st March . impression of the Glory of Go d whenever our lips praise Him . Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" under 6th November .
a) Part of two sentences in the lecture 'Truth',
But he forgets that there is only one Teacher and that is God Himself . W e Cont .
a)
19
20 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) 13th May 1921, in all are pupils, Nuria Best's handwriting . b) The same sentence as - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - under a) in Miss R . - - - - and that One is God Himself . Jones's handwriting . Truly He all are pupils , c) A typewritten version .
d) 1st ed . "The Saki" - 22nd March .
He does not know that there is but one Teacher, God Himself .
Bowl of There One Teacher, Himself ; we are all His ouoils .
is
Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" under 30th October, last sentence and Sayings I : "Gayan" - Sura 35 .
a) A sentence in the lec- All knowledge of the earth is as ture 'Truth', 13th May clouds covering the sun . 1921, in Nuria Best's and Miss R .Jones's handwriting . b) A typewritten version .
All earthly knowledge is as clouds dimming the sight .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of All earthly knowledge is as a Saki" - 23rd March . cloud covering the sun . Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" under 31st October .
20
a) Part of a sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting .
The first sign of the realization of truth is tolerance to others ,
b) The same sentence as under a), in miss R . Jones's handwriting .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -tolerance towards others .
c) A typewritten version .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -tolerance .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 24th March .
The first sign of the realization of truth is tolerance .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting .
Man, filled with earthly knowledge, and what he calls learning, is often the knowledge only of names and forms and so has no capacity for the knowledge of truth or of God .
b) The same sentence as under a), in Miss R . Jones's handwriting .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . and so he has no capacity for true learning, and real knowledge _
c)
21 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
c) A typewritten version . Man filled with earthly knowledge, (shortened form a)) . - the knowledge of names and forms has no capacity for the knowledge of Truth and of God . d) Copied by Ng .
The
man filled with _ the knowledge of names and o rms _ has no capacity for the knowledge of Truth .
e) 1st ed . "The Bowl of He who is filled with the knowledge Saki" - 25th March . of names and forms has no capacity for the knowledge of God . Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" under 28th October (= version d) .
No documents referring to the saying under 26th March have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Man is closer to God than the fishes Saki" 26th March . are to the ocean .
1st ed . "The Bowl of We start our lives trying to b e Saki" - 27th March . teachers ; it is very hard to learn to be a pupil . Note : For origin, elaborations and different versions see "The Bowl of Saki" under 30th October . Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" under 22nd March and Sayings I : "Gayan" - Sura 35 .
No documents referring to the saying under 28th March have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Until the heart is empty, it cannot Saki" - 28th March . receive the knowledge of God .
a) A sentence in the lec- according to his evolution, so man ture 'Truth', 13th May knows the truth . 1921, in Nuria Best's and Miss R . Jones's handwriting . b) A typewritten cony . according to his evolution_ _ man knows the truth . c) 1st ed . The Bowl of According to his evolution , Saki" - 29th March . Knows _ T ruth .
man
Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" under 27th October .
21
22 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Part of two sentences in the address to mureeds : 'Prayer', 8th May 1921, evening (Religious Gatheka I, 10, which afterwards became no . 8), in Joyce Burnett 's handwriting .
and in whatever manner you humble yourself before Him, it can never be enough . To humble yourself before His Perfection, that is to deny yourself .
b) The same sentence as under a ), in an unidentified handwriting .
but in whatever manner you humble yourself , it can never be enough_ t o humble your limited self limitless Perfection . before
C)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . enough . To humble your limited self - - - - etc .
A typewritten version . (= version a) .
d) 1st ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 30th March .
We can never sufficiently humble our limited self before limitless perfection .
a) A sentence in the address to mureeds : 'Prayer', 8th May 1921, evening (Religious Gatheka I, 10, which afterwards became no . 9), in Joyce Burnett's handwriting . The last two words 'all good' were crossed out by Gd . and replaced by other words .
The name of God itself - without praise - just the name, is a bliss which fills the soul with all good .
- - - etc . - - - - - with a3 -I geed light and s and happiness as nothing else can .
b) The same sentence as even to utter the name of God is under a), in an uniden- a blessing that can fill the soul tified handwriting . with light and joy and happiness a s nothing else can do . c) A typewritten version Even to utter the name of God is a bliss which fills the soul with light (Religious Gatheka 9) . and joy and happiness as nothing else can . d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Even to utter the name of God is a Saki" - 31st March . blessing that can fill the sou l (Version b) . with light and joy and happiness as nothing else can do .
a) Part of two sentences to find beauty in perfection . in the address to And when, to our utmost, we praise mureeds : 'Prayer', 8th that, the soul is filled with bliss May 1921, evening which nothing else can give . (Religious Gatheka I, 10, which afterwards became no . 9) in Joyc e 22 Burnett's handwriting . Cont . a)
23 ORIGIN and elaborations : Cont . a ) 'And' was out by Gd . and replaced in her writing by 'the of God' .
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
crossed When, to our utmost, we praise 'that' the beauty of God, our soul - - etc . handbeauty
b) The same sentence in an when we praise unidentified handwriting . the beauty of God, the soul is filled with blis s c) A typewritten copy (Religious Gatheka no . 9) .
When to our utmost we praise the beauty of God_ our soul is filled with bliss .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 1st April .
When one praises the beauty of Gods one's soul is filled with bliss .
No documents referring to the sayings under 2nd - 6th April have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed
. Saki" -
"The Bowl of 2nd April .
Sympathy is the root of religion, an d so long as the spirit of sympathy i s living in your heart you have th e light of religion .
1st ed . Saki" -
"The Bowl of 3rd April .
Life is a misery for the man absorbe d in himself .
1st ed . SSli" -
"The Bowl of 4th April .
To give sympathy is sovereignty, t o desire it from others is captivity .
1st ed . SAki" -
"The Bowl of 5th April .
God speaks to the ears of every heart , but it is not every heart that hear s Him .
1st ed . "The Bowl of SAki" - 6th April .
As one can see when the eyes are open , so one can understand when the hear t is open .
a) Copied by Ng . from
b) 1st ed . Saki" -
(?) .
"The Bowl of 7th April .
a) Notebooks 1921 :
It is being dead to self that is th e recognition of God . It is being dead to self that is th e recognition of God .
Saying . As the light of the sun helps plant s to grow and flourish, so the spirit o f God, reflected in the soul, helps ma n towards perfection . b)
23
24 ORIGIN
and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Saying Bola . b) MS . Nq . Inayat Khan add . 'Bola' - - - - - - - - - - - helps the plant to grow so the Divine Spirit over it . helps th e
soul towards its perfection . c) Copied by Kf .
d) Typewritten under 'Bolas II', mostly meant for publication in the "Gayan " (Gd .'s bookpreparation) .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
e) Copied by Mt . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Sur', meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Sura . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
f) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 8th April .
As the light of the sun helps the plant to grow, so the Divine Spirit helps the soul towards its perfection .
.
No documents referring to the sayings under 9th-10th April have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 9th April .
Things are worth while when we seek them ; only then do we know their value .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 10th April .
When a man looks at the ocean, he can only see the part of it which comes within his range of vision, so it is with the Truth .
a) From 'Nature's Religion' reported and revised . by Dr . O . Gruner„in 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', p .20, 1st ed . 1920/21 .
It does not matter in what way a person offers his respects and his reverence to the deity he worships . It only matters how sincere he is in his offering .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 11th April .
It does not matter in what way a person offers his respect and his reverence to the deity he worshipst i t matters only how sincere he is in his offering .
a) From 'The Personality of Really speaking, the ideal of God is a God', reported and revis- bridge connecting the limited life with ed by Dr .O .Gruner, in 'In the unlimited . Whoever travels on this an Eastern Rosegarden', bridge passes safely from the limited to p .28, 1st ed . 1920/21 the Unlimited Life . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of 24
- The ideal of God is a bridg e Cont . b)
ORIGIN and elaborations :
:
25
DIFFERENT VERSIONS
Cont . b) Saki" - connecting the limited life with the un12th April . limitedi whoever travels over this bridge passes safely from the limited to the unlimited life . a) Copied by Al . Bola . ated 5th February 1925, If you don't want to understand, you will together with other say- not understand . ings, meant for publication in the "Vadan" . b) Gd .'s typewritten book- Bola . preparation of "Vadan" . - - - - - - - - - - - -
,
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of He who wants to understand will underS)ki" - 13th April . stand . Cf . Sayings I : "Vadan" - Bola 55 .
a) From a lecture The Ef- Man is the picture or reflection of his fect of Prayer', (1918imagination . He is as large as he thinks 20), revised by Dr . Gru- himself, as great as he thinks himself, ner as published in as small as he thinks himself . 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) A typewritten copy with Man is the picture of the reflection of sayings found with the his image ; h e is as larg e Gayan documents, but _ or as mostly not pub . there small as he thinks himself . c) 1st ed . The Bowl of Man is the picture of the reflection of Saki" - 14th April . his imagination ; he is as large or as small as he thinks himself .
a) From the lecture 'Love, The great teachers of humanity become Human and Divine',(1916- streams of love . 20), reported and revised by Dr .O .Gruner as published in 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1920/21 . A typewritten copy with - - - - - - - - - - - - , sayings, found with th e Gayan documents . b) Ms . Km . - - - - - - - - - - - Changed in Gd .'s hand- The truly great souls _ writing . streams of love .
become
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The great Teachers of humanity become saki" - 15th April streams of love . (See version a ) Cf . Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 69 .
a) A sentence in the lec- "God is love", - three words which ture 'Love, Human and open up an un-ending realm for th e Cont . a)
25
26 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) Divine', (1916 1920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 .
thinker who desires to probe the depths of the secret of love .
b) A typewritten copy with sayings, found with the Gayan documents .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . - - - - - the secret of life .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 16th April .
"God is love" ; three words which open up an un-ending realm for the thinker who desires to probe the depths of the secret of life .
It is the surface of the sea that a) A sentence in the lecmakes waves and roaring breakers ; ture 'Silent Life', 6th the depth is silent . December 1919, reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . A typewritten copy with - - - - - - - - - - - sayings, mostly meant fo r
publication in the "Gayan" . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of It is the surface of the sea that Saki " '- 17th April . makes waves and roaring breakers ; the depth is silent .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Will, Human and Divine', (19171920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 .
Our success or failure all depends upon the harmony or disharmony of our individual will with the divine will .
b) A typewritten cony with sayings , mostly meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Our success or failure depends upon the harmony or inharmony of our individual will with the D ivine Will .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of SAki" - 18th April .
Our success or failure depends upon the harmony or disharmony of our individual will with the Divine Will .
a) A sentence in the lec- The wave realises "I am the sea," and ture 'Mind, Human and by falling into the sea prostrates Divine', 24th October itself to its God : 26 Cont . a)
27 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) 1919, reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the boo k 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . oublished 1920/ 1921 . b) A typewritten cony with The wave realises, I am the sea, sayings, partly meant and by falling into the sea prostrates for publication in "The itself before its God . Bowl of Saki", oartlv for the "Gayan" . c) Conied by Gr ., probably The wave realizes "I am the sea-" for her bookoreoaration and by falling into the sea, prosof "The Bowl of Saki" . trates itself to its God . d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The wave realizes "I am the sea," and Saki" - 19th April . by falling into the sea_ prostrates itself to its God .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Silent Life', December 1919, reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the boo k In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 .
The secret of happiness is hidden hidden under the cover of spiritual knowledge .
b) Copied by Gr ., probably for her bookpreparation of "The Bowl of Saki" .
The secret of happiness is hidden under the cover of the spiritual knowledge .
c) A typewritten cony with sayings, partly meant for oublication in "The Bowl of Saki", partly for the "Gayan" .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -of s p_ iritual knowledge .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 20th April .
The secret of hapoiness is hidden under the cover of spiritual knowledge .
a) Two sentences in the lec- The soul is first born into the false ture 'The Will, Human self ; it is blind . In the true self and Divine', (1917-1920), the soul opens its eyes . reported and revised by Dr .O .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The soul is first born into the false Saki" - 21st April . self, it is blind ; in the true self the soul opens its eyes .
27
28 ORIGIN
and elaborations :
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Will, Human and Divine', (19171920), reported and revised by Dr .O .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 .
DIFFERENT VERSIONS : To learn the lesson of how to live is more important than any psychic or occult learning .
b) Copied by Gr ., probably for her bookpreparation of "The Bowl of Saki" .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 22nd April .
To learn the lesson of how to live is more important than any psychic or occult learning .
a) The last sentence in the lecture 'The Symbology of Religious Ideas - The Flute of Krishna' (Gatha Symbology - Nakshi Bandi 111-6), 14th May 1921, in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
Knowledge without love is lifeless .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 23rd April .
Knowledge without love is lifeless .
whereas the sole aim of the mystic a) Part of a sentence in the is to keep near to the idea of unity lecture 'Mind, Human and Divine', 24th October and find out "where do we unite?" . 1919, reported and revised by Dr .O .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 . b) A typewritten cony with sayings, partly meant for publication in "The Bowl of Saki", partly for the "Gayan" .
The aim of the mystic is to keep near to the idea of unity and find out Where do we unit e
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 24th Aoril .
The aim of the Mystic is to kee p near to the idea of unity, and find out where we unite .
a) Notebooks
Saving . Sleep is comfortable, but awakening is interesting .
:
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 25th April . 28
Sleep is comfortable, but awakening is interesting .
29 ORIGIN and elaborations : a) Notebooks 1921 :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Saying . Every moment has its special message .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Every moment has its special message . Saki" - 26th April .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . To make God a reality is the real object of worship .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of To make God a reality is the real SAki" - 27th April . object of worship .
a) A sentence in the lec- Every passion, every emotion has its ture 'The Mystery of effect upon the mind, and every change Breath', (1917-1920), of mind, however slight, has its reported and revised by effect upon man's body . Dr .Gruner as Published in the book 'in an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Every Passion, every emotion has its Saki" - 28th April . effect upon the mind, and every change of mind, however slight, has its effect upon man's body .
a) Two sentences in the When souls meet one another, what lecture 'Character and truth they can exchange! It is uttered Fate' (1917-1920), re- in silence, yet always surely reaches ported and revised by its goal ! Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of When souls meet each other , wha t Saki" - 29th April . truth they can exchange? It is uttered in silence, yet always surely reaches its goal.
a) A sentence in the lec- All gains, whether material, spiritual, ture 'Character and moral or mystical - are all gains in Fate', (1917-1920), re- answer to one's own character . ported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of All gains, whether material, spiritual, Saki" - 30th April . moral, or mystical, are in answer to one's own character . 29
30 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in the lec-
You can have all good things - wealth ,
ture 'Gain and Loss', (1917-1920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 1st May .
friends, kindness, love to give an d love to take - once you have learne d not to be blinded by them, learned t o escape from disappointment, learned t o escape from repugnance at the ide a that the things are not as you woul d want them to be . You can have all good things - wealth , friends, kindness, love to give, an d love to receive - once you hav e learned not to be blinded by them; learned to escape from disappointment ,
and from repugnance at the idea that things are not a s
you want them to be .
a) Notebooks
:
Saying . The truth often need not be veiled for it naturally veils itself from . the eyes of the (ignorant (unintimate .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The Truth need not be veiled .Saki" - 2nd May . for it veils itself from the eyes of the ignorant .
a) Two sentences in the This purpose is to learn mastery, not lecture 'Stilling the to be the vehicle for others to use . Mind', (1917-1920), re- He who does not direct his own mind ported and revised by lacks mastery . Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of No man should allow his min d Saki" - 3rd May . to be a vehicle for others to use ; he who does not direct his own mind lacks mastery .
a) A sentence in the lec- The mind's rest is equally necessary ture 'Stilling the Mind', as that of the rest of the body and (1917-1920), reported yet we always keen it in action . and revised by Dr .Gruner as oublished in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of _ Rest of mind is as necessary as rest of body, and Saki" - 4th May . yet we always keep the former i n 30
action .
31 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in the lecThose who have given deer thoughts to ture 'Stilling the Mind', the world are those only who have (1917-1920), reported controlled the activity of their and revised by Dr .Gruner minds . as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 5th May .
Those who have given deep thoughts to the world are those who have controlled the activity of their minds .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Attainment of Power', (1917-1920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden' , 1st ed . 1920/1921 .
Unity in realisation is far greater than unity in variety .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of SAki" - 6th May .
Unity in realization is far greater than unity in variety .
a) Two sentences in the lecture 'Stilling the Mind', (1917-1920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 .
Your mind brings the record of th e gramophone, and if you use a hars h voice, the instrument produces a harsh note ; if beautiful words an d things it will sing beautiful word s and things . It will produce the same record that you have experienced i n life .
b) 1st ed . Saki" -
The after-life is like a gramophone ; man's mind brings the records ; if the y are hard the instrument produce s harsh notes, if beautiful, then i t will sing beautiful songs . It wil l produce the same records that man ha s experienced in this life .
"The Bowl of 7th May .
a) A sentence in the lecIf we depend on our eyes for sight, ture 'The Knowledge of and our ears for hearing , and our Past, Present and mo uth for speech , we are still "dead"! Future', (1917-1920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as Published in the book 'in an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of
He who depends upon his eyes fo r Cont .
b)
31
32 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) Saki" - 8th May . sight, his ears for hearing, and his mouth for speech, he is stil l "dead" .
a) Three sentences in the We cover our spirit under our body . lecture 'Spirits and We cover our light under a bushel . Spiritism', (1917-1920), We never allow the spirit to become reported and revised by conscious of itself . Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of We cover our spirit under our body, Saki" - 9th May . our light under a bushel ; we never allow the spirit to become conscious of itself .
a) A sentence in the lec- When we devote ourselves to th e ture 'Spirits and thought of Him, all illumination and Spiritism', (1917-1920), revelation is ours ! reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of When we devote ourselves to the Saki" - 10th May . thought of God, all illumination and revelation is ours .
a) A sentence in the lec- God-communication is the best commuture 'Spirits and nication that true spiritualism can Spiritism', (1917-1920), teach us ! reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as Published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of God-communication is the best commuSaki" - 11th May . nication that true spiritualism can teach us_
a) A sentence in the lec- The mystic will look for what Omar ture 'Spirits and Khayyam calls Wine, the wine of the Spiritism', (1917-1920), Christ, after drinking which no-one reported and revised by will ever thirst . Dr .Gruner as Published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . 32
b)
: ORIGIN and elaborations :
33
DIFFERENT VERSIONS
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The mystic desires what Omar Khayya m Saki" - 12th May . calls wine ; the wine of the Christ, after drinking whichl no one will ever thirst .
a) A sentence in the lec- Our limited self is as a wall se o_ature 'The Desire of rating us from the self of God . Nations', (1917-1920) , reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Our limited self is a wall sepaS)ki" - 13th May . rating us from the Self of God .
a) A sentence in the lec- The Wisdom and Justice of God are ture 'The Desire of within us, and yet they are far away Nations', (1917-1920), under the covering of the veil of the reported and revised by limited self . Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The wisdom and justice of God are Saki" - 14th May . within us, and yet they are far away, hidden by the veil of the limited self .
a) A sentence in the lec- The one who is looking for a gain, is ture 'Moral Culture : smaller than his gain, the one who has The Law of Renunciation, renounced a thing has risen above it . the Relativity of Gain' , March, 1920, Old London Course, Series III, nr . 6 (later published i n the book 'Moral Culture', Deventer, Netherlands, 1937) .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of He who is looking for a reward , is he who ha s Saki" - 15th May . smaller than his reward ; renounced a thing has risen above it .
33
3 3A ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in the lecThe poverty of one who has renounced ture 'Moral Culture : is the real riches compared with the The Law of Renunciation, riches of the one who holds them fast . the Relativity of Gain', March, 1920, Old London Course, Series III, nr . 6 (later published i n the book 'Moral Culture', Deventer, Netherlands, 1937) .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 16th May .
The poverty of one who has renounced is _ real riches compared with the riches of one who holds them fast .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Moral Culture : The Law of Beneficence, Our Dealings with God', July, 1919, in the handwriting of Nuria Best .
Love for God is â‚Źes the expansion of heart, and all actions that come from the lover of God are virtues, they cannot be otherwise .
b) A stencilled copy of an edited version of a), Old London Course, Series II, nr . 10 (later published i n the book 'Moral Culture', Deventer, Netherlands, 1937) .
Love for God is _ the expansion of the heart, and all - - - - - - - - -
C)
33A
1st ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 17th May .
Love for God is the expansion o f the heart, and all actions that come from the lover of God are virtues ; they cannot be otherwise .
33B ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Moral culture : The Law of Beneficence, Our Dealings with God', July, 1919, in the handwriting of Nuria Best .
God is the ideal that raises mankind to the utmost reach of perfection .
b) A stencilled copy o f an edited version of a), Old London Course, Series II, nr . 10 (later published i n the book 'Moral Culture', Deventer , Netherlands, 1937) .
c) 1 ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 18th May
God is the ideal that raises mankind to the utmost height of perfection .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Moral Culture : The Law of Beneficence, Our Dealings with Acquaintances', February 1919, old London Course, Series II, nr . 5 (later published in the book 'Moral Culture ', Deventer, Netherlands, 1937) .
He is wise who treats an acquaintance as a friend, and he is foolish who treats a friend as an acquaintance , and he is impossible who treats friends and acquaintances as strangers, you cannot help him .
b) 1 ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 19th may
He is wise who treats an acquaintance as a friend, and he is foolish who treats a friend as an acquaintance , and he is impossible who treats friends and acquaintances as strangersi you cannot help him .
3 3B
34 ORIGIN and elaborations :
Cont .)
and
he
is
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
impossible
who
treat s
friends and acquaintances as strangers ; you cannot help him .
a) Part of a sentence in but it is the insight into life which the lecture 'The Desire is the real religion and which alone of Nations', (1917- can help man to understand life! 1920), reported an d revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the boo k 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Insight into life is the real Saki" - 20th May . religion .- which alone can help men to und_erstand life .
a) Two sentences in the The realisation that the whole life lecture 'Democracy', must be give and take, is the reali26th November 1919, re- sation of the spiritual truth and ported and revised by fact of true democracy . Not till this Dr .Gruner as published spirit is formed in the individual in the book 'In an himself can the whole world be elevEastern Rosegarden', ated to the higher grade . 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The realization that the whole life Saki" - 21st May . must be "give and take" is the realization of the spiritual truth and fact of true democracy ; not until this spirit is formed in the individua l can the whole world be elevated to the higher grade .
a) Three sentences in the Therefore the ideal life is in followlecture 'The Ideal Life', ing one's own ideal . It is not in (1917-1920), reported checking other people's ideals . and revised by Dr .Gruner Leave everyone to follow his own as published in the book ideal . 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 19 21 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The perfect life is - following Saki" - 22nd May . one's own ideal, not in checking those of others ; leave everyone to follow his own ideal .
34
a) Two sentences in the Every person's desire is according lecture 'The Journey to to his evolution . That which he is the Goal', (1917-1920), ready for is the desirable 1) for him . reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published Cont . a)
ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
35
Cont . a) in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden' , 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Every man's desire is according to Saki" - 23rd May . his evolutions that which he i s ready for, is the desirable thing for him . Note 1) : one word omitted in the printed text .
a) Two sentences in the lecture 'The Ideal Life', (1917-1920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 .
Discussion is for those who say "What I say is right, and what you say is wrong ." A sage never says such a thing ; hence there is no discussion !
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 24th May .
Discussion is for those who say , "What I say is right, and what you say is wrong ." A sage never says such a thing, hence there is no discussion .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Journey to the Goal', (1917-1920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden' , 1st ed . 1920/1921 .
Forgiveness does not come by learning, it comes by understanding that a person should be allowed to travel along that path which is suited to his temperament .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of SSki" - 25th May .
Tolerance does not come by learning, but insi ht ; by understanding that each one should be allowe d to travel along the path which is suited to his temperament .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Journey to the Goal', (1917-1920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden' , 1st ed . 1920/1921 .
As long as a person has the longing to attain to any particular motive he cannot go further .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of SAki" - 26th May .
So long as a man has a longing to obtain any particular object , he cannot go further than that object .
35
36 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Two sentences in the lec- Everybody's oath is for himself . ture 'The Journey to the Let everyone accomplish his own Goal', (1917-1920), re- desires so as to be able to rise ported and revised by above them to the Eternal Goal . Dr .Gruner as published i n the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Every man's path is for himself, Saki" - 27th May . let him accomplish his own desire s that he may thus be able to rise above them to the eternal goal .
a) A sentence in the lecThe control of the self means the ture 'The Journey to the control of everything . Goal', (1917-1920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 28th May .
The control of self means the control of everything .
a) Two sentences in the lec- "God is love ." When love is awakened ture 'The Journey to the in the heart, God is awakened there . Goal', (1917-1920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of "God is love" ; when love is awakened Saki" - 29th May . in the heart God is awakened there .
a) Part of two sentences in the lecture 'The Spiritual Hierarchy', (19171920), reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 .
all the inharmony of the world is usually caused by religious differences, and the differences are caused by man's failing to understand that religion is one, truth is one, God is one . - How can there be two religions ?
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of A ll the disharmony of the world SAki" - 30th May . caused by religious differences_ is the result of man's failure to understand that religion is O ne, truth is One, God is One ; 36
Cont . b)
37 ORIGIN and elaborations : Cont .
b)
_
how
can
DIFFERENT VERSIONS : there
be
two
religions .
a) From the lecture 'Moral The use of friendship for a selfish Culture : The Law of motive is like mixing bitter poison Reciprocity, Our Deal-i . with the sweet rose syrup . . . ings with Our Friends', 21 Nov . 1917,in the hwr . of Nuria Best . b) Stencilled, edited ver- - - - - - - - - - - sion of a), Old Londo n Course 1 .2 (later pub . in bk . 'Moral Culture', 1937) .
c)• 1st ed . Saki" -
"The Bowl of 31st May .
:
The use of friendship for a selfis h motive is like mixing bitter poiso n with the sweet rose syrup .
Saying or Philosophy . Your bodily desire takes you away from your heart's wish and the wish of you r heart separates you from your soul' s longing, so by every lower desire ma n is pulled further down from the highe r goal of his soul's longing .
a)
Notebooks 1921
b)
Copied by Gd . from (?) . The fir st part of a) .
_ Man's bodily appetites take him awa y from his heart s desire . His heart's desires keep him awa y from the abode of his soul .
c)
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki " - 1st June .
man's bodily appetites take him awa y from his heart's desire ; his heart's desires keep him awa y from the abode of his soul .
No docu ments referrin g to the sayings under 2nd - 3rd June have been foun d in the archives to date . 1st ed .
"The Bowl of
Saki" - 2nd June .
Words are but the shadows of thought s
and feelings .
Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" - 14th November . 1st ed . Saki" -
"The Bowl of 3rd June .
The more elevated the soul, th e broader is the outlook .
Note : See also "The Bowl of Saki" - 9th November .
a) From the lecture 'Moral The secret of a friend should be kept Culture : The Law of Rec- as one's own secret ; the fault of a iprocity, Our Dealings friend should be hidden as one's ow n Cont .
a)
37
38 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) with Our Friends', fault' . 21 Nov . 1917, in th e
hwr . of Nuria Best . b) Stencilled, edited ver- The secret of the friend should be kept sion of a), Old London as one's own secret . The fault of the Course 1 .2 (later pub . friend one should hide as one's ow n in bk . 'Moral Culture', fault . 1937) . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 4th June .
The secret of a friend should be kep t as one's own secret; t he fault of a friend one should hide as one's ow n fault .
a) From the lecture 'Moral Culture : The Law of Reciprocity, Our Dealings with Our Friends' , 21st November, 1917, i n the hwr . of Nuria Best .
Forbearance, patience toleranc e are the only conditions which keep tw o individual hearts united .
b) Stencilled, edited version of a), Old London Course 1 .2 (later pub . in bk . 'Moral Culture' , 1937) .
Forbearance, patience, and toleranc e are the only conditions which keep tw o individual hearts united .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 5th June .
Forbearance, patience _ and toleranc e are the only conditions which keep tw o individual hearts united .
a) A sentence in the We blame others for our sorrows and lecture 'Mental Crea- misfortunes, not perceiving that we tion', 18th May 1919, ourselves are the creators of our reported and revised world . by Dr . O . Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of We blame others for our sorrows and Saki" - 6th June . misfortunes, not perceiving that we ourselves are the creators of our world .
a) From the lecture 'Moral Nobody appears inferior to us when our Culture : The Law of heart is kindled with kindness, and our Beneficence, Our Deal- eyes are opened to the vision of God . ings with Servants' , Dec ., 1918, in the hwr . of Nuria Best .
b) Stencilled, edited ver- Nobody appears inferior to us when our 38
Cont . b)
38A ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) sion of a), old London Course 11 .3 (later published in the book "Moral Culture", 1937) .
heart is kindled with kindness, and our eyes are open_ to the vision of God .
C)
Nobody appears inferior to us when our heart is kindled with kindness, and our eyes are open to the vision of God .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 7th June .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Moral Culture : the Law of Beneficence, Our Dealings with Our Neighbours', March, 1919, in the hwr . of Nuria Best .
Selfishness keeps man blind through life . . .
b) Stencilled, edited version of a), Old London Course, Series II . nr . 6 (later published in the book 'Moral Culture', Deventer, Netherlands, 1937) . c) 1st ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 8th June .
Selfishness keeps man blind through life .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Moral Culture : The Law of Renunciation, The Final Victory', Old London Course, Series III , nr . 10, July 1920, (later published in the book 'Moral Culture', Deventer, Netherlands, 1937 .
The final victory in the battle of life for every soul is when he has abandoned, which means when he has risen above what once he valued most .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 9th June .
The final victory in the battle of life for every souls i s when he has risen above the things which once he most valued .
No documents referrin g to the sayings under 10th - 11th June have been found in the archive s to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of When power leads and wisdom follows, Saki" - 10th June . the face of wisdom is veiled an d she stumbles ; but when wisdom leads and power follows, they arriv e 38A Cont .)
38B ORIGIN and elaborations : Cont .)
safely
at
DIFFERENT VERSIONS : their
destination .
1st ed . The Bowl of Man's whole conduct in life depends Saki" - 11th June . upon what he holds in his thought .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Moral Culture : The Law of Beneficence, Our Dealings with Our Neighbours', March, 1919, in the hwr . of Nuria Best .
In this struggle of life - if one can be considerate enough to keep his eyes open to all around him and those whom the circumstances have placed about him in life, he would see in what way he could be of help to them . Then he becomes rich, and he inherits the riches of God . . .
b) Stencilled, edited In this struggle of life, if one can version of a), Old be considerate enough to keep his eyes London Course, Series open to all around himl whom II, nr . 6 (later pub- circumstances have placed about him lished in the book in life, and would see in what way he 'Moral Culture', Dev- could be of help to them . _ H e beenter, Netherlands, comes rich, _ he inherits the kingdom 1937 . of God _ c) 1st ed . "The Saki" - 12th June .
Bowl of _ _ He who can b e_ detached enough to keep his eye s open to all _ - those whom circumstances have placed about him, - - and see in what way he can be of help to them, he it is who becomes riche he inherits the K ingdo m of God .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Desire of Nations', (1917-20) reported and revised by Dr . Gruner, as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1920/21 .
Real justice cannot be perceived until the veil of selfishness has been removed from the eyes .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 13th June .
True J ustice cannot be perceived until the veil of selfishness has been removed from the eyes .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Mental Creation', 18th May 1919, reported and revised by Dr . O . Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1920/21 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 14th June .
Thoughts have prepared for us that happiness or unhappiness which we experience .
Our thoughts have prepared for us happiness or unhappiness we experience .
Note : See also "The Bowl of Sdki" - 11th November . 38B Cont . b)
the
39 ORIGIN and elaborations : Cont .
b)
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" - 23rd August .
No documents referrin g to the sayings under 15th - 17th June have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 15th June .
Love is the best means of making the heart capable of reflecting the soul power ; and love in the sense of pain rather than of pleasure . Every blow opens a door wherefrom the soul-power comes forth .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 16th June .
Every experience on the physical, astral or mental plane is just a dream before the soul .
isted . The Bowl of Saki" - 17th June .
The fire of devotion purifies the heart of the devotee, and leads unto spiritual freedom .
Note : = "The Bowl of saki" - 4th February .
a) A sentence in the book 'Love, Human and Divine', by Sherifa Lucy Goodenough, Southampton, 1919, p . 15 .
When love's fire produces its flame it illuminates like a torch the devotee's path in life, and all darkness' vanishes .
b) lst ed
When love's fire produces its flame, it illuminates like a torch the devotee's path in life, and all darkness vanishes .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'On Vocations', 1920, copied from Nuria Best's hwr ., but only available in type . Partly published in the magazine 'Sufi' of October 1920 .
It is mistrust that misleads, sincerity leads straight to the goal .
b) lst ed . "The Bowl of of Saki" - 19th June
It is mistrust that misleadsi sincerity always leads straight to the goal .
. The Bowl of Saki" - 18th June .
a) A sentence in the book Love lies in service . Only that which 'Love, Human and Div- is done, not for fame or name, nor for ine', by Sherifa Lucy the appreciation or thanks of those for Goodenough, Southampton, whom it is done, is love's service .
1919, p . 36 .
b)
39
40 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b)
Love lies in service ; only that which is done, not for fame or name, nor fo r the appreciation or thanks of those fo r
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 20th June .
whom
it is done,
is love's service .
a)
A sentence in the book 'Love, Human and Divine', by Sherifa Lucy Goodenough, Southampton , 1919, p . 41-2 .
The soul is all light, but al l darkness is caused by the deat h of the heart . Pain makes it alive .
b)
lst ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 21st June .
The soul is all light , _ _ darkness is caused by th e de adnes s of the heart, pain makes it alive .
No documents referrin g to the sayings under 22n d June have been found in th e archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 22nd June .
The quality of forgiveness that burn s up all things except beauty, is th e quality of love .
a)
Two sentences in the lecture 'On Spheres', 1920, copied from Nuria Best's hwr ., but only available in type, Partly published in the magazine 'Sufi ' of October 1920 .
Each individual composes the musi c of his own life - if he injure s another, he leaves his musical tract . When his sphere is disturbed, he i s disturbed himself, and there is a discord in the melody of his life .
b)
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 23rd June .
Each individual composes the musi c of his own lifei if he injure s another _ he breaks the harmony , and there i s discord in the melody of his life- .
40
a)
A sentence in the lecHe who with sincerity seeks his rea l ture 'On Vocations', purpose in life is himself sought b y 1920, copied from Nuria that purpose . Best's hwr ., but only a vailable in type . Partl y published in the magazin e 'Sufi' of October 1920 .
b)
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 24th June .
He who with sincerity seeks his rea l purpose in life, is himself sought b y that purpose .
a)
Sentences in the lecture 'Constancy', 1920, in Nuria Best's hand-
A mystic calls life motion . It i s constant motion in every aspect ( . . . . .etc .) .( . . . .) Our whole life is i n Cont . a)
41 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) writing . Between brackets is indicated by compiler that only Parts of the sentences in this version have been given .
constant change
b) In the old Magazine 'Sufi' of October 1920 some parts of the lecture 'Constancy' were published ; among these the following two sentences :
Through motion and change life becomes intelligible . We live a life of change ; but it is constancy that we seek, and it is this innate desire that leads man to God .
C)
Through motion and change, life becomes intelligible ; we live a life of change, but it is constancy we seek ; it is this innate desire of the soul that leads man to God .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 25th June .
( . . . . . etc . )
We live in the life of change, but we seek that which is constant . It is this search after constancy which has brought man back to God . If it was not for this desire man would not have discovered the God Ideal .
a) Two sentences in the lec- Every being has a definite vocation, ture 'On Vocations', and his vocation is the light which 1920 , known to have been illuminates his life . copied from Nuria Best's The man who disregards his vocation is a lamp unlit . handwriting but only available in type . This lecture was partly published in the old Magazine 'Sufi' of October 1920 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 26th June .
Every being has a definite vocation, and his vocation is the light-that illumines his life . The man who disregards his vocation is as a lamp unlit .
a) Two sentences in the lec- The heart is like a being which is ture 'Constancy', 1920, asleep and receiving a sharp blow it in Nuria Best's handwrit- awakens . Also the heart is like a ing . stone and the fire hidden within i t can only be brought to life when it is struck by a hard material . b) In the old Magazine 'Sufi' of October 1920 some parts of the lecture 'Constancy' were published ; among these the following two sentences :
The heart is a being that sleeps sound until it is awakened to life by a blow . The heart is a rock and the hidden fire within it flashes out when it is struck by another rock .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 27th June .
The heart sleeps until it is awakened to life b y a blow . It is as a rock, and th e Cont .
c)
41
42 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . c)
hidden fire flashes out when _ - struck by another rock .
a) Two sentences in the lecture 'Constancy', 1920, in Nuria Best's handwriting .
The method of attainment is to endeavour always to make others happy . Real hanpiness is entering the gate .
b) In the old magazine 'Sufi' of October 1920 some Parts of the lecture 'Constancy' were published ; among these the following two sentences :
The awakened heart says, "I must give, I must not demand . it is r who must love another, and must make another happy ." Thus it enters a gate that leads to a constant happiness .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 28th June .
The awakened heart says, "I must give, I must not demand . " Thus it enters a gate that leads to a constant happiness .
a) Three sentences in the lecture 'On Spheres', 1920, known to have been copied from Nuria Best's handwriting but only available in type . This lecture was partly published in the old Magazine 'Sufi' of October 19 20 .
The worlds are held together by the heat of the sun . Each of us are atoms held in position by that eternal sun we call God . Within us is that same central power - we call it the light of God, or the love of God - and by it we too hold up the human beings within our sphere ; or lacking it, we let them fall .
b) lsted . "The Bowl of Saki' - 29th June .
The wcrlds are held together by the heat of the sun ; each of us are atoms held in position by that Eternal Sun we call God ; within us is the same central power we call the ligh t or the love of God_ by it we hold together the human beings within our sphere, or, lacking it, we let them fall .
a) Some sentences in the lecture 'Constancy', 1920, in Nuria Best's handwriting .
Therefore the attitude of man seeking these things outwardly must change and become inward . Somewhere we must find them, because they are innate qualities of life and are the only salvation and goal of life . By selfrealisation and self-control and selfobservation we realise this .
It is uncertain if these sentences are the origin of b) . A oassage in the reporting may be missing . b) In the old Magazine 'Sufi' of October 192 0 42
As a man dives within, he finds that his real self is not subject to motion . Cont . b)
43 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) some parts of the lecture 'Constancy' were published ; among these the following sentence : c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 30th June . is
When a man dives within, he finds that real self is above the ;)erpetual motion of the universe .
a) Part of a sentence in man's pride and satisfaction in the lecture .'Belief', what he knows limits the scope of his 1920, as published in vision . the Magazine 'Sufi' of October 1920 . b) Copied by Ng . Man's - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Man's pride and satisfaction i n Saki" - 1st July . what he knows limits the scope of his vision .
a) A sentence in the lec- He must first create peace i n ture 'Sufism', 1920, of himself, if he desires to see peace which the first part in the world ; for lacking the peace became a Gatheka (Old within, no effort of his can bring Series I no .4), as pub- any result . lished in the Magazine 'Sufi' of October 1920 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Man must first create peace in Saki" - 2nd July . Himself if he desires to see peace in the world, for lacking _ peace within, no a?fort of his can bring any result .
a) Two sentences in the Now it is the knowledge of the self, lecture 'Sufism', 1920, of the ego, that gives knowledge of of which the first cart humanity ; and in the understanding of became a Gatheka (Old the human being lies that understandSeries I no .4), as pub- ing of nature, which reveals the law lished in the Magazine of the whole creation . The knowledge 'Sufi', October 1920 . of the self is therefore the essential . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The knowledge of self is Saki" - 3rd July . the essential knowledge, it gives knowledge of humanity ; in the understanding of the human being lies that understanding of nature_ which reveals the law of creation .
a) A verse in 'The Man and while man blames another for causing the Wise Man', 1918, in him harm , Mt .'s handwriting and The wise man first takes himsel f Cont . a) 43
44 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) published in the Magazine 'Sufi' of January 1919 .
to task .
b) Published in the book 'La Voie de la Revelation', Geneva, Switzerland, 1921 . 1 )
Tandis que 1'homme blame le prochain du mal qu'il lui cause , Le sage s'en Arend d'abord a luimeme .
st
c) 1 ed . "The Bowl of While Man blames another for causing Saki" - 4th July . him harm , the Wise Man first takes himself to task . 2 ) Note 1 ) :
The same book in English was published in 1922 as 'The Way of Illumination' . 2) : The words 'Man ' and 'Wise Man ' were printed in italics .
a) A sentence in the lec- Whatever their faith, the wise have ture 'Sufism', 1920, of always been able to meet each other which the first part beyond those boundaries of external became a Gatheka (Old forms and conventions, which are Series I no .4), as pub- natural and necessary to human life, lished in the Magazine but which none the less separate 'Sufi' of October 1920 . humanity . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Whatever their faith, the wise have Saki" - Sth July . always been able to meet each other beyond those boundaries of external forms and conventions which are natural and necessary to human life, but which none the less separate humanity .
a)
Notebooks
1921
Saying . It is the Message that Droves the Messenger, not the claim .
b) Copied by Gd . from (?) Saying . in February 1921 . - - - - - message that must prove the messenger, - - - - - - - . c) Copied by Km .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - messenger, and not - - - .
d) Copied by Ek . and clasBola . sified by Inayat Khan as - - - - - - - - - - - 'Bol', originally mean t for publication in the "Gayan" . e) 1st ed . "The Bowl of It is the message 3) proves the Saki" - 6th July . _messenger, not the claim . (Version a)) . Note 3) : 'That' probably omitted by mistake . 44
45 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a)
Every soul has a definite task, and the fulfilment of this individual purpose can alone lead him aright . Illumination comes to him through the medium of his own talent .
Two sentences in the lecture 'Sufism ', 1920, of which the first part became a Gatheka (Old Series I no .4), as published in the Magazine ' Sufi' of October 1920 .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 7th July .
Every soul has a definite task, and the fulfilment of each individual purpose can alone 1 man aright ; illumination comes to him through the medium of his own talent .
a) 'A verse in 'The Man and the Wise Man', 1918, in Mt .'s handwriting and published in the Magazine 'Sufi' of January 1919 .
While man judges another from his own moral standard , The wise man looks also at the point of view of another .
b) Published in the book 'La Voie de la Revelation, Geneva, Switzerland, 1921 . 1)
Tandis que 1'homme juge autrui d'apres son aroore Point de vue Le sage regarde aussi du Point de vue d'autrui .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of While Man judges another from his own Saki" - 8th July . moral standpoint , the Wise Man looks also at the o_oint of view of another . 2 ) Notes 1) and 2) : see notes with the saying under "The Bowl of Saki" - 4th July .
a) A verse in 'The Man and the Wise Man', 1918, in Mt .'s handwriting and published in the Magazine 'Sufi' of January 1919 .
While man rejoices over his rise and sorrows over his fall , The wise man takes both as the natural consequences of life .
b) Published in the book Tandis que 1'homme se rejouit de son 'La Voie de la Reveelevation et s'attriste de so n lation', Geneva, Switzerabaissement land, 1921 . 3 ) Le sage les accepte toutes deux comme la consequence naturelle de la vie . c) 1st ed . " The Bowl of saki" - 9th July .
Notes 3 ) and 4 ) :
While Man rejoices over his rise and sorrows over his fall, the Wise Man takes both as the natural consequences of life . 4 ) see notes with the saying under "The Bowl of Saki " - 4th July .
45
46 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Communion with God', 1919, as found in Kemila van Spengler's handwriting (probably copied from an early MS .), and as published in the Magazine 'Sufi' of June 1919 .
It is the lover of God whose heart is filled with devotion who can commune with God, not the one who makes an effort with his intellect in analysing God .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 10th July .
It is the lover of God whose heart is filled with devotion .- who can commune with God ; not he who makes a n effort with his intellect to analyse God .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Inayat Khan's Visit to Scotland', 1918/1919, as published in the Magazine 'Sufi', June 1919 .
I do not bemoan the past, and I do not worry about the future, but try to make the best of to-day .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 11th July .
Do not bemoan the past; do not worry about the future, but try to make the best of to-day .
a) Part of a sentence in the lecture 'On Spheres', 1920, known to have been copied from Nuria Best's handwriting but only available in type . This lecture was partly published in the old Magazine 'Sufi' of October 1920 .
If he can quicken the feeling of another to joy, or to gratitude - by that much he adds to his own life ;
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 12th July .
He who can quicken the feeling of another to joy_ or to gratitude, by that much he adds to his own life .
a) A sentence in a lec- Praise cannot exist without blame, ture 'The Message', it has no existence without its 1921, found with Gd .' s opposite . bookpreparation of 'The Unity of Religious Ideals' . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki " - 13th July .
Cf . Sayings I : 46
Praise cannot exist without blame, it has no existence without its opposite . "Gayan" -
Bola 80 .
47 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in the chapter 'The Purpose of Life', from the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen', by Mary Zohra Williams, p .11, London, 1919 .
Riches and power may vanish because they are outside of us, but only that which is within can we call our own .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 14th July .
Riches and power may vanish becaus e only that they are outside ourselves ; own . which is within can we call our
a) A sentence in the chapter 'The Purpose of Life', from the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen', by Mary Zohra Williams, p .11, London, 1919 .
When the world is evolving from imperfection towards perfection, it needs all love and sympathy ; great tenderness, and watchfulness is required of each one of us .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 15th July .
The world is evolving from imperfection towards perfection, it need s all love and sympathy ; great tenderness _ and watchfulness is required from each one of us .
a) A sentence in the chapter 'The Purpose of Life', from the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen', by Mary Zohra Williams, p .11, London, 1919 .
The heart of every man, both good and bad, is the abode of God, and care should be taken never to wound anybody by word or act .
b) 1st ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 16th July .
The heart of every man, both good and bad, is the abode of God, and care should be taken never to wound anyone by word or act .
Note : Cf . Part Two, no . 415 (p .169) .
a) A sentence in the chapter 'Blessed are the Poor in Spirit', from the book ' Pearls from the Ocean Unseen', by Mary Zohra Williams, p .13, London, 1919 . b) 1st ed . The Bowl of Saki " - 17th July .
We should be careful to take away from ourselves any thorns that prick us in the personality of others .
We should be careful to take away from ourselves any thorns that pric k
Cont .
b)
47
47A ORIGIN and elaborations : Cont .
b)
us
in
the
DIFFERENT VERSIONS : personality
of
others .
a) A sentence in the chapter 'Cause' from the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen', by Mary Zohra Williams, p .21, London, 1919 .
There is a light within every soul . It only needs the clouds which overshadow it to be broken for it to beam forth .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 18th July .
There is a light within every i t only needs the clouds that shadow it to be broken for it beam forth .
a) A sentence in th e chapter 'Blesse d Are They That Mourn', from the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen', by . Mary Zohra Williams, p .14, London, 1919 .
The soul's true happiness lies in experiencing the inner joy, and it will never be fully satisfied with outer seeming pleasures . Its connection is with God, and nothing short of perfection will ever satisfy it .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 19th July .
The soul's true happiness lies in experiencing the inner joy, and i t
soul ; overto
will never be fully satisfied with outer .- seeming pleasures ; i ts connection is with God, and nothing short of perfection will ever satisfy it .
a) A sentence in the chapter 'Blesse d Are They That Mourn', from the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen', by Mary Zohra Williams, p .15, London, 1919 .
b) 1st ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 20th July .
a)
Every blow we get in life pierces through the heart, and awakens our feelings to sympathize with others, and every swing of comfort lulls us to sleep, and we become unaware of all .
Every blow in life pierce s the heart- and awakens our feelings to sympathise with others ; and every swing of comfort lulls us to sleep, and we become unaware of all .
A sentence in the A study of life is the greatest of all chapter 'The Effect religions, and there is no greater and 47A Cont . a)
47 B ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) of Deeds', from more interesting study . the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen', by Mary Zohra Williams, p .37, London, 1919 .
b) 1st ed . The Bowl of A study of life is the greatest of all Saki" - 21st July . religions, and there is no greater or more interesting study .
a)
A sentence in the We can learn virtue even from the chapter The Prayer- greatest sinner, if we consider him ful Attitude', from as a teacher .
the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen' , by Mary Zohra Williams, p .28, London, 1919 .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of We can learn virtue even from the Saki" - 22nd July . greatest sinner_ if we consider hi m as a teacher .
a) A sentence in the warmth melts, while cold freezes . Drops chapter 'Repent Ye, of water fallen on a warm place and on a for the Kingdom of cold place are affected differently . The God Is at Hand', from drop in the warm sphere spreads and bethe book 'Pearls from comes larger, covers a larger space , the Ocean Unseen', whereas a drop in the cold place freezes, by Mary Zohra becomes limited . Repentance has the efWilliams, p . 18, fect of a drop spread in the warm sphere . London, 1919 . It causes the heart to expand and becom e universal, while the hardening of the heart brings limitation . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 23rd July .
warmth melts, drop of ic e
while cold
freezes .
A
7-n -a warm place spreads an d covers a larger space, wherea s a -drop-of water in a cold place freezesand becomes limited . Repentance has the effect of spreading a drop in a warm sphere , _ causing the heart to expand and become universal- while the hardening of the heart brings limitation .
a)
A sentence in the There should be a balance in all our chapter 'Balance', actions ; to be either extreme or from the book 'Pearls lukewarm is equally bad .
from the Ocean Unseen', by Mary Zohra Williams, Cont . a)
47B
48 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) p .39, London, 1919 . b) 1st ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 24th July .
There should be a balance in all our actions, to be either extreme or lukewarm is equally bad .
a) A sentence in th e chapter 'The Alchemy of Happiness', from the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen', by Mary Zohra Williams, p .44, London, 1919 .
Our spirit is the real part of us ; the body is but its garment . There is absolute peace in the abode from whence the spirit came, and the true happiness of the soul lies in that peace . As man would not find peace at the tailor's because his coat came from there, so the spirit cannot get true happiness from the earth just because the body belongs to the earth .
b) 1st ed . Saki" -
Our spirit is the real part of us : the body _ but its garment .
"The Bowl of 25th July .
_ _ _ ma n A would not find peace at the tailor's , because his coat comes from there : neither can the spirit obtain true hap piness from the earth just because hi s body belongs to _ earth .
a) Notebooks 1921
b) 1st ed . Saki" -
:
Saying . Every purpose has a birth and death , therefore God is beyond purpose .
"The Bowl of 26th July .
Every purpose has a birth and death ; therefore God is beyond purpose .
No documents referring to the saying under 27th July have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Belief and disbelief have divided Saki" - 27th July . mankind into so many sects, blinding his eyes to the vision of the oneness of all life .
a) Notebooks 1921
48
:
Sangata . Phy . The spirit in loving form disillusions itself, for spirit can only love spirit and . . . . . . . Saying . Spirit can only love spirit, in loving form it disillusions itself . b)
49 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) MS . Sd . Saying . Second version a) . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - it desfllnslane deludes itself . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Spirit can only love spirit ; in loving Saki" - 28th July . form it deludes itself .
a) Two sentences in a lec- It is one thing to love and anothe r ture 'The Message ', thing to understand . The one who love s 1921, found only in the Messenger is a devotee, but th e type with Gd .'s book- one who knows the Messenger is hi s
preparation of 'The
friend .
Unity of Religiou s
Ideals' . b) 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki " - 29th July .
1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki " - 30th July . Note :
a) Notebooks 1921
Among a million believers in Go d there is scarcely one who makes God . a reality .
For complete elaborations and different version s see Sayings I : "Gayan " - Chala 14 .
:
Saying . The soul feels suffocated when th e doors of the heart are closed .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki " - 31st July .
a) Notebooks 1921
To love is one thing , to understand is another ; he who love s is a devotee , but he who un derstands is a friend .
:
The soul feels suffocated when th e doors of the heart are closed .
Saying . Understanding makes the troubles tragedies of life lighter to bear .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Understanding makes the trouble Saki" - 1st August . of life lighter to bear .
a) A sentence in the lec- The same herb planted in various ture 'Sufism', 1920, as atmospheric conditions, will vary in published in the Maga- form accordingly, but retain its zine 'Sufi' of October characteristics . 1920 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The same herb planted in various Saki" - 2nd August . atmospheric conditions_ will vary i n form accordingly, but will retain its characteristics . 49
50 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
No documents referring to the saying under 3rd August have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 3rd August .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Think, before envying the position of your fellowman , with what difficulty he has arrived at it .
Saying . Tala . Life is what it is, you cannot change it, but you can change yourself .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Life is what it is, you cannot change Saki" - 4th August . it ; but you can always change yourself . Note : See for complete elaborations and different versions Savings I : "Gayan" - Bola 244 .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saving . Life is one continual series of experiences, one leading to the other, till the soul arrives at its final destination .
b) MS . Gr . and a typewritten copy of sayings with corr . and add . by Inayat Khan, meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Saying . Life is a continual - - - - etc . - - - - - - - - arrives at its destination .
C)
Life is a continual series of experiences , one leading to the other_ until the soul arrives at its nation .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 5th August .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . The external life is but a shadow of the inner reality .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of External life is - the shadow of Saki" - 6th August . the inner reality . Note : For complete elaborations and different versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 46 .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . At the cost of one failure the wise learns a lesson for the whole life .
b) MS . Gr . Saying . and a typewritten copy - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - of sayings with corr . learns his lesson - - - - - - - - . 50 Cont . b)
1 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
5
Cont . b) and add . by Inayat Khan , meant for publication in the " Gayan" . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of At the cost of one failure, the wise Saki" - 7th August . learn the lesson for the whole life .
a)
Notebooks 1921
b)
MS . Gr .
:
Saying . The more you evolve spiritually, th e further you pass from the understandin g of every man . Saying .
Sangita I Nasihat (also a
to which Inayat Khan saying) . added the remark : 'Sangi- - - - - - - - - - - spiritually _ th e to I Nasihat (also a
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
saying) ' c) A typewritten copy of
Saying .
sayings with corr . and
Sangita II (as well) .
- - - - - - - - - - - -
.
add, by Inayat Khan , meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Inayat Khan added : 'Saying , Sangita II (as well)' over it . d)
Copied by Gr .
Saying .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -t th e more you - - - - - - - - - - - etc . e)
1st ed . "The Bowl of
Sdki" - 8th August .
The more you evolve spiritually, th e
further you pass from the understandin g every man .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . One word can be more precious than all the treasures of the earth .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of One word can be more precious than all Saki" - 9th August . the treasures of the earth . Note : For complete elaborations and different versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 33 .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
b) MS . Gr . and a typewritten copy of sayings with corr . and add . by Inayat Khan, meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Saying . Narrowness is primitiveness, it is the breadth of heart that proves evolution . Saying . - - - - - - - primitiveness ; it is - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
c)
51
52 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
C) 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki" - 10th August .
Narrowness is primitiveness ; it is the breadth of heart that proves evolution .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . A way to heaven is simpler to find than to find the way on the earth .
b) MS . Gr . Inayat Khan added '(heathen saying)' over it .
Saying . Heathen Saying . It is simpler to find a way to Heaven than to find a way on _ earth .
c) A typewritten copy of sayings mostly meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Tala .
d) 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki " - 11th August .
It is simpler to find a way to Heaven than to find a way on earth .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . In nature it is the hand of man that designs God's proposed plan . In nature it is God Who by the hand of man designs and carries out His intended plans .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of It is God who, by the hand of man, Saki" - 12th August . designs and carries out His intended Second version a) . Plans i n nature . Note : For complete elaborations and different versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 202 .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . The admirer of nature is the true worshipper of God . 1 )
Note : For complete elaborations and different versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 259 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The lover of nature is the true Saki" - 13th August . worshipper of God .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . In the country you can see God's Glory and in the city you can glorify His name . 2 )
Note 2 ) : For complete elaborations and different versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Chala 40 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of In the country you see the glor y of God ; in the city you _ glcriSaki " - 14th August . fv His name . 52
53 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) MS . Gr . Tala . See for complete The pain of life is a price paid for elaborations Sayings I : the quickening of the heart . "Gayan" - Bola 157 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The pain of life is the price paid for Saki" - 15th August . the quickening of the heart . Cf . Sayings II : Part Two, no . 293 .
a) Notebook 1914/1915
: The words that enlighten precious than jewels . 1 )
are more
Note 1) : See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Chala 66 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Words that enlighten the soul are Saki" - 16th August . more precious than jewels .
a) MS . Gr . Inayat Khan added 'Saying' over it .
Saying . Love is the current coin of all people of all periods .
b) Two typewritten copies of sayings originally meant for publication in the "Gayan" : one copy under the heading 'Sayings', the other under the heading 'Bola' . (Gd .'s bookpreparation) .
- - - - - - - - - - - -
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 17th August .
Love is the current coin of all peoples in all periods .
a) See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 93 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Do not take the example of another SAki" - 18th August . as an excuse for your own wrong-doing .
a) See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gavan" - Bola 153 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Overlook the greatest fault of Saki" - 19th August . another, but do not partake of it yourself in the smallest degree .
53
54 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) MS . Gr .
Saying . Cleverness and complexity are not necessarily wisdom .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 20th August .
Cleverness and complexity are not necessarily wisdom .
a) Notebook 1914/1915
:
Saying . The whole world's treasure is too small a price for a word that lightens the soul . 1 )
Note 1) : See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Chala 68 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 21st August .
The whole world's treasure is too small a price to oay for a word that kindles the soul .
a) See for complete elaborations Sayings I : "Gayan" - Tala 53 .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 22nd August .
He is living whose sympathy is awake ; and he is dead whose heart is asleep .
a) A sentence in the lecThoughts have prepared for us that ture 'Mental Creation', happiness or unhappiness which we 18th May 1919, reported experience . and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in th e book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 . b) is ed . " The Bowl of Saki" - 23rd August . Note :
Ey our thoughts we have prepared for ourselves the happiness or unhappines s we experience .
Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" - 14th June and 11th November .
a) See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Alapa 17 . b) A typewritten copy of sayings originally meant for publication in the "Gayan", under the heading 'Bola V . (Gd .'s bookpreoaration) .
Put your trust in God for support and see His hidden Hand working through all sources .
54
c)
5
ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
c) 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki" - 24th August .
Put your trust in God for support and see His hidden hand working through all sources .
a) Two sentences in the lecture 'The Effect of Prayer', (1917-1920), reported and revised by Dr .O .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 .
Faith is the A, B, C of the revelation of God . This faith is begun by prayer .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of SAki" - 25th August .
Faith is the A B_ C of the realiza tion of God . This faith begins by prayer .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
5
Saying . Passion is the smoke and emotion is glow from love's fire and consideration is the flame that illuminates the path . 1 )
Note 1) : See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Tala 39 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Passion is the smoke and emotion is UnselSBki" - 26th August . the glow of love's fire . YT-siness Is the flame tfiat illumines the path .
a) See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Chala 25 . b) 1st ed . " The Bowl of The Soul of Christ is the Light of Saki " - 27th August . the Universe .
a) See for complete elaborations : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 87 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Death is a tax the soul has to pay SAki" - 28th August . for having had a name and a form .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . A pure life and clear conscience are as wings attached to the soul . 2)
Note 2) : See for complete elaborations and differen t versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 148 .
b)
55
56 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 29th August .
A pure life and a clean conscience are as two wings attached to the soul .
a) MS . Gr .
Tala . The giver is greater than the gift : the receiver is smaller than the reward .
b) A typewritten copy of sayings originally meant for publication in the "Gayan", .under the heading 'Tala' (Gd .'s bookpreparation) .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -. - gift, the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 30th August .
The giver is greater than the gift .
a) See for elaborations : Sayings I : "Gayan" Tala 40 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 31st August .
He who has spent has used ; he who has collected has lost ; but he who has given has saved his treasure for ever .
a) See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Chala 134 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 1st September .
Joy and sorrow both are for each other . If it were not for joy, sorrow could not be, and if it were not for sorrow , joy could not be experienced .
a) See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : " Gayan " - Bola 135 . b) 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki" - 2nd September .
Self-pity is the cause grievances .
a) MS . Gr . Inayat Khan add . 'Sangitha I Thasawuf' 1) over it, and wrote in the margin : 'also a saying' .
Sangitha I Thasawuf . How can the Unlimited Being be limited, since all that seems limited is, in its depth beyond all limitations ?
56
of all life's
b)
57 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIF FERENT VERSIONS :
b) A typewritten copy of sayings originally meant for publication in the "Gayan", under the heading 'Tala' (Gd .'s bookpreparation) .
- - - - - - - - - etc . - - - - - - is_ in its depth - - etc .
c) Sangita I - 39 :
Tassawuf . How can the Unlimited Being be limited, since all that seems limited is in its depth beyond all limitations ?
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of How can the u nlimited Being b e Saki" - 3rd September . limited? All that seems limited is in its depth beyond all limitations . Note 1) : A phonetic transcription of such words from the original languages, may cause differences in the spelling .
a)
See for elaborations : Sayings I : "Gayan" Bola 27 .
b)
1st ed . Saki" -
a)
See for elaboration s and a different version : Sayings I : "Gayan" Bola 154 .
b)
1st ed . Saki" -
a)
See for elaborations : Sayings
"The Bowl of 4th September .
"The Bowl of 5th September .
I : "Gayan"
Pleasure blocks, but pain clears th e way of inspiration .
There is no source of happiness othe r than that in the heart of man .
-
Tala 18 . b)
1st ed . Saki" -
"The Bowl of 6th September .
Happy is he who does good to others ; miserable is he who expects good from others .
a) See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 183 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of One virtue is more powerful than a Saki" - 7th September . thousand vices .
57
58 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : " Gayan " - Bola 221 . b) 1st ed . " The Bowl of The soul is either raised or cast Saki " - 8th September . down by the power of its own thought, speech and action .
a) See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 126 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Love is the divine mother's arms ; SAki" - 9th September . when those arms are spread, every soul falls into them .
a) Cf . this sentence in the .lecture 'The Power of the .Word', pub . in 'Sufism', Dec ., 1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 10th September .
There is a saying among the Hindus that the tree that'bears much fruit bows low .
It is the bow low .
fruit that makes the tree
a) The first sentence in In order to learn forgiveness man the lecture 'The Training must learn tolerance first . of the Ego' (- Gatha Moral Culture Series II no . 9), 14th May 1921, in Miss R .Jones's handwriting . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of In order to learn forgiveness .- man SAki" - 11th September . must first learn tolerance .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Training of the Ego' (= Gatha Moral Culture, Series II no .9), 14th May 1921, in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
The first step towards forgiveness is to forget .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 12th September .
The first step towards forgiveness is to forget .
a) Part of a sentence in the and the only thing he can do to lecture 'The Training of live in the midst of all kinds o f 58
Cont . a)
59 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) the Ego' (= Gatha Moral Culture, Series II no . 9), 14th May 1921, in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
inharmonies is to strengthen his will power so as to bear all things, and yet keeping the fineness of character and the nobleness of manner together with an ever-living heart .
b) Copied by Gr ., probably from Inayat Khan's handwriting, and written by her in one of Sr .'s notebooks (1921) . b) Was not compared with a) .
'The only way to live in the midst of all inharmonious influences is to strengthen the will-power and endure all things ; yet keeping the fineness of character and nobility of manner together with an ever-living heart . I .K . '
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The only way to live in the midst Saki" - 13th September . of inharmonious influences is t o strengthen the will power and endure all things, yet keeping _ fineness of character and nobility of manner together with an ever living heart full of love .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'About Discipleship', 18th May 1921, in Kf .'s handwriting . This lecture has become Sangatha 111-30 .
Devotion to the Teacher is not for the sake of the Teacher, it is for God .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 14th September .
Devotion to a spiritual teacher is not for the sake of the t eacher, it is for God .
a) Two sentences in the lecture 'The Training of the Ego' (= Gatha Moral Culture, Series II no . 9), 14th May 1921, in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
To become cold with the coldness o f the world is a weakness, and to be come broken by the hardness of th e world is feebleness . But to be in th e world, and yet to keep above the worl d is like walking on the water .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of SAki" - 15th September .
To become cold from the coldness o f the world is weakness, to be come broken by the hardness of th e world is feebleness, but to live i n the world and yet to keep above i t is like walking on the water .
a) A sentence in the lec- God alone deserves all love and the ture 'About Disciple- freedom of Love is in giving it to ship', 18th May 1921, God . in Kf .'s handwriting . This lecture has become Sangatha 111-30 .
b)
59
60 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of God alone deserves all lover and the Saki" - 16th September . freedom of love is in giving it to God .
a) Part of a sentence in the lecture 'About
for life 1) has the power to ope n the door of Eternal Life .
Discipleship', 18th May 1921, in Kf .'s handwriting .
This lecture has become Sangatha 111-30 .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of
Love has the power to ope n
Saki" - 17th September .
the door of e ternal
Note 1) : 'life'
l ife .
may have been wrongly understood fo r
'love' .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'About Discipleship', 18th May 1921, in Kf .'s handwriting,
Love has its limitations when it i s directed to limited beings, but love that is directed to God has n o limitations .
This lecture has become Sanaatha 111-30 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of
Saki" - 18th September .
Love has its limitations when it
is
directed towards limited beings, bu t love directed to God has n o limitations .
a) Two sentences from
The Teacher however great can ne ve r
Inayat Khan's answers
give his knowledge to the pupil .
to questions about the
The pupil must create his ow n
symbolism of the refusal of the wise virgins to give their oil to th e foolish, May 1921 ,
knowledge .
reported by Kf . These answers were als o written down by Ng . i n her notebook, probabl y after the lecture, an d Gd . copied them in a somewhat differen t sequence . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 19th September .
The Teacher, however great, can - etc .
The teacher, however great, can neve r give his knowledge to the DuDil _ the Duoil must create his ow n knowledge .
a) A sentence from Inayat One thing is true that Murshid cannot 60 Cont . a)
61 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) Khan's answers to questions, May 1921, reported by Kf .
give the knowledge , but he can kindle the light if the oil is there .
These answers were also written down by Ng . in her notebook, probably after the lecture, and Gd . copied them in a somewhat different sequence .
One thing is true, Murshid cannot give _ knowledge_ but - - - - etc .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 20th September .
One thing is true, altho ugh the teacher cannot give the knowledge , he can kindle the light if the oil is in the lamp .
a) A sentence from Inayat Khan' s answers to questions about asceticism, May 1921, reported by Kf .
Will power is the keynote of Mastery, and asceticism is the development of will power .
These answers were also written down by Ng . in her notebook, probably after the lecture, and Gd . copied them in a somewhat different sequence . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 21st September .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - of mastery, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
Will-power is the keynote of mastery, and asceticism is the development of will-power .
No documents referring to the saying under 22nd September have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Real generosity is an unfailing sign Saki" - 22nd September . of spirituality .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
b) Copied from (?) in an unidentified handwriting . This copy also contains other sayings meant originally for publication in the "Gayan" with some corr . and add . by Inayat Khan .
Saying . Generosity is born of two sources, vanity and love, one false and the other true . Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - - sources : The vanity and love : one false, and the other true .
c)
61
62 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl o f
There are two kinds of generosity, the real and the shadow ; the former is prompted by love, the latter by vanity .
Saki" - 23rd Septembe r
No documents referring to the saying under 24th September have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 24th September .
It is better to pay than receive from the vain, for such favours demand ten times their cost .
a) A sentence in the chapter 'Repent ye, for the Kingdom of Heaven . . .', from the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen' by Mary Zohra Williams, p .17, 1st ed . 1919 .
The Kingdom of Heaven is in hearts of those who realize God .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 25th September .
The Kingdom of Heaven is in the hearts of those who realize God .
a) A sentence in the chapter 'The Purpose of Life', from the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen' by Mary Zohra Williams, p .11, 1st ed . 1919 .
To relieve the hunger of others we must forget our own hunger .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 26th September .
In order t o relieve the hunger of others, we must forget our own hunger .
a) A sentence in the chapter 'Cause', from the book 'Pearls from the Ocean Unseen', by Mary Zohra Williams, p .20, 1st ed . 1919 .
It is when man has lost the idea of duality and feels himself a t one with all creation, that his eyes are opened and he sees the cause of everything .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 27th September .
It is when
the
man has lost the ide a
of separateness and feels himself at one with all creation_ that his eyes are opened and he sees the cause of all things .
a) A typewritten document To fall beneath one's Ideal is to 62 Cont . a)
62A ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
lose one's tract of life ; . . . Cont . a) containing the text of the book 'Sex', intended for publication at the end of 1920, but of which the 1st ed . appeared only in 1938, with the title 'Rassa Shastra' . This document was found among the papers of Mrs . Elizabeth Bailey of Kents Town, who acted as hostess from time to time when Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan visited Brighton (England) . A sentence a t the beginning of the 'lecture On Some Ideals', 1914-1918 . b) Sherifa Goodenough's typescript for the book .
- - - - - - - - one's i deal is to loose one's - - - - -
c) 1st ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 28th Septembe r
To fall beneath one's ideal is to lose one's share of life .
d) Book, 'Rassa Shastra : The Science of Life's Creative Forces', Deventer, Netherlands, 1st . ed . 1938 .
To fall beneath one's ideal is to lose one's track of life .
a) A typewritten document And the wise of all ages have taught tha t containing the text of it is the knowledge of the Divine Being the book 'Sex' intended that is life and the only reality . to be published at th e end of 1920, but of whic h the 1st ed . appeared onl y in 1938, with the titl e 'Rassa Shastra' . Thi s document was found among the papers of Mrs . Eliza beth Bailey of Kents Town ,
who acted as hostess fro m time to time when Pir- o Murshid Inayat Khan visit ed Brighton (England) . A sentence toward the begin ning of the lecture 'O n Some Ideals', 1914-1918 . b) Sherifa Goodenough's And the wise of all ages have taught tha t typescript for the book it is the knowledge of the divine b ein g and the book 'Rassa that is life and the only reality . Shastra : The Science o f Life's Creative Forces' , Deventer, Netherlands, 1938 .
62A
62B ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of T he wise of all ages have taught that Saki" - 29th September . it is knowledge of the Divine Being that is life, and the only reality .
a) A typewritten document When the stream of love flows in its containing the text of full strength, it purifies all that the book 'Sex' intended stands in its path, as the Ganges , to be published at the in the teachings of the Ancients, purend of 1920, but which ifies all those who plunge into its appeared, as 'Rassa sacred waters . Shastra', only in 1938 . This document was found among the papers of Mrs . Elizabeth Bailey of Kents Town, who acted as hostess from time to time when Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan visited Brighton (England) . A sentence near the middle of the lecture 'Courtship', 19141918 . b) Sher i fa Goodenough' s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - typescript for the book . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - in its course , as the Ganges _ in the tractings of the ancients- purifies - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of When the stream of love flows in its Saki" - 30th September . full strength, it purifies all that stands in its way, as the Ganges according to the teaching of the ancients - purifies all those who plunge into its sacred waters . d) Book 'Rassa Shastra : The Science of Life's Creative Forces', Deventer, Netherlands, 1st ed . 1938 .
When the stream of love flows in its full strength_ it purifies all that stands in its course , as the Ganges , in the teachings of the ancients, purifies all who plunge into its sacred waters .
a) A sentence in the lec- Each soul's attainment is according ture 'The Way of Attain- to its evolution . ment', undated, found in Sherifa Goodenough's handwriting . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Each soul's attainment is according Saki" - 1st October . to its evolution .
No documents referring to the saying under 2nd October have been found in the archives to date . 62B
63 ORIGIN and elaborations : 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 2nd October .
DIFFERENT VERSIONS : It always means that you must sacrifice something very dear to you when His call comes .
a) Found with Gd .'s book- Renunciation is always for a purpose, preparation of 'The it is to kindle the soul, tha t Unity of Religious nothing can hold the soul back from Ideals', in an un- God, but when the soul is kindled the identified handwriting . life of Renunciation is not a necessity . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Renunciation is always for a purpose ; Saki" - 3rd October . it is to kindle the soul tha t nothing may hold it back from God, but when it is kindled, the life of renunciation is not necessary .
a) Found with Gd .'s bookpreparation of 'The Unity of Religious Ideals', tyoewritten as part of a passage about the Messengers .
There are those who are lighted candles, they can light other candles . These are they who can inspire others . But the other candles must be of wax ; if they are of steel, they cannot be lighted .
b) Copied in an unidentified handwriting .
There are those who are like a lighted candle , they can light other candlest these - - - - - - - - - - - - others .but - - - - - - etc .
c) 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki " - 4th October .
There are those who are like a lighted candle, they can light other candles ; but the other candles must be of wax, if they are of steel_ they cannot be lighted .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Cupid and Psyche', 5th May 1921, found in an unidentified handwriting . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 5th October .
a) Part of a sentence in the lecture 'Cupid and Psyche', 5th May 1921, found in an unidentified handwriting .
Therefore, it is no exaggeration to say that there is no greater Scripture than nature, for nature is life itself .
There is no greater Scripture than nature, for nature is life itself .
because wisdom can only be learnt gradually and every soul is not ready to receive or to understand th e complexity of the purpose of life . b)
63
64 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 6th October .
wisdom can only be learnt gradually, and every soul is not ready to receive or to understand the complexity of the purpose of life .
a) Part of a sentence in the lecture 'Cupid and Psyche', 5th May 1921, found in an unidentified handwriting .
It is a very high stage in the path of love when man really learns to love another with a love that asks no return ,
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of SAki" - 7th October .
It is a very high stage on the path of love when a man really learns to love another with a love that asks no return.
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Cupid and Psyche', 5th May 1921, found in an unidentified handwriting .
Love alone is a fountain from which all virtues fall as drops of sparkling water .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 8th October .
Love alone is the fountain from which all virtues fall-as drops of sparkling water .
a) A sentence in the lec- The purpose of one's whole life is ture 'Cupid and Psyche', to make God a reality . 5th May 1921, found in an unidentified handwriting . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The whole purpose of Saki" - 9th October . is to make God a reality .
a) Part of a sentence in the but if you lecture 'Cupid and everything, you Psyche', 5th May 1921, for God is in found in an unidenti- more He is in fied handwriting .
life
will seek for good in will always find it, all things, and still all beings .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of If you seek the good in Saki" - 10th October . every soul , you will always find it, S till for God is in all things . more , He is in all beings . 1 ) Note 1) : The words 'things' and 'beings' were printed in italics .
a) Two sentences in the Knowledge of God is beyond man . 64
Cont . a)
65 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) lecture 'Unity and But the secret of God is hidden in Uniformity', 6th May the knowledge .of unity . 1921, in an unidentified handwriting . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The knowledge of God is beyond man 's Saki" - 11th October . reason . The secret of God i s hidden in the knowledge of unity .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Cupid and Psyche', 5th May 1921, in an unidentified handwriting .
Seek Him in all souls, good and bad, wise and foolish, attractive or unattractive, for in the depth of each there is God .
b) 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki" - 12th October .
Seek Him in all souls, good or bad, wise and foolish, attractive and unattractive ; _ in the depths of each there is God
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Unity and Uniformity', 6th May 1921, in an unidentified handwriting .
When there is an inharmony in one's individual self, how can one spread harmonious vibrations and atmosphere?
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 13th October .
When in ourselves there is inharmony, how can we spread harmony . 1 )
Note 1) : This same shortened version was published in the Magazine 'Sufism' of December 1923 in a report of the lecture 'Unity and Uniformity' .
a) Part of a sentence in it is the innermost being of man the lecture 'Unity and that is the real Being of God . Uniformity', 6th Ma y 1921, in an unidentified handwriting . b) 1st ed . The Bowl of The innermost being of man Saki" - 14th October . is the real being of God .
a) A sentence in the lec- Love itself is the healing power and ture 'Unity and Uniform- remedy to all pain . ity', 6th May 1921, in an unidentified handwriting . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Love itself is the healing power and Saki" - 15th October . the remedy for all pain .
65
66 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in the lec- You will realise that your heart goes ture 'Unity and Uniform- forward to everyone, that you are ity', 6th May 1921, in ready to tolerate and forgive everyan unidentified hand- one and see brotherhood and God in writing . all ; till the vision of life become s one single vision of the Unity and Sublimity of God . b) 1st ed . The Bowl of By loving, forgiving and serving, it Saki" - 16th October . is possible for your whole'life to become one single vision of the Sublime Beauty of God . 1 ) Note 1) : This same shortened version was Published in the Magazine 'Sufism' of December 1923 in a report of the lecture 'Unity and Uniformity .
No documents referrin g to the saying unde r 17th October have bee n found in the archive s
to date .
a)
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 17th October .
Mysticism to the mystic is bot h science and religion .
Cooled by Sk . from (?) .
Saying . The principles of mysticism ris e from the heart of man ; they ar e learned by intuition and proved b y
reason . b)
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 18th October .
The Principles of mysticism ris e from the heart of man ; they ar e learnt by intuition and proved b y
reason .
a)
A sentence in the lecture 'The Dance of the Soul', 11th May 1921, as published in the Ma gazine 'Sufism' o f September 1921 .
Your work in life must be you r religion, whatever your occupatio n may be .
b)
1st ed . "The Bowl of saki" - 19th October .
Your work in life must be you r religion, whatever your occupatio n may be .
a) Part of two sentences the true joy of every soul is the in the lecture 'The realization of the divine spirit . Dance of the Soul', The absence of realization keeps th e 66 11th May 1921, as Pub- soul in despair . Cont . a)
67 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSION S :
Cont . a) lished in the Magazine ' Sufism' of September 1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 20th October
The true joy of every soul is in the realization of the divine spirit, and the absence of realization keeps the soul in despair .
a) Part of a sentence in the lecture, 'The Dance of the Soul', 11th May 1921, as published in 'Sufism' Sept ., 1921 .
.and the desire for service, for the sake of the God in whom we can all unite beyond the narrow barriers of race and creed .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 21st October .
Beyond the narrow barriers of race and creed we can all unite, because we all belong to One God .
a) From a lecture, "The . . ., for all forms of worship or Power of the Word", belief should draw man closer to 'Sufism', Dec ., 1921 . God, . . . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of All forms of worship or prayer must draw man closer to God _ Saki" - 22nd October .
a) From a lecture, "The When man is separated from God in Power of the Word", thought his belief is no use to him, 'Sufism', Dec ., 1921 . his worship is but little use t o him . . . . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of When man is separated from God in Saki" - 23rd October . his thoughts his belief is of no us e little -, his worship is _ of us e
a) Part of a sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13 May 1921, in the hwr . of Nuria Best and of Miss R . Jones .
. . .the source of realizing the truth is within man, but man is the object of his realization .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 24th October .
The source of the realization of truth is within man, _ he himself is the object of his realization .
Note : For complete elaborations and different versions see "The Bowl of Saki" under 12 March .
a) Same origin as the one . .the real self denial meant, is cited for 24 Oct . a) . the losing of oneself in God . b)
67
68 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) A typewritten version .
True self-denial losing oneself in God .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 25th October
True self-denial is losing one's self in God .
a) Part of a sentence in the lecture 'Truth' . 13th May 1921, in Muria Best's and in Miss R . Jones's handwriting .
It is more important to find the truth about oneself than to-find the truth about heaven or hell ,
is
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of It is more important to find out Saki" - 26th October . the truth about one ' s self than to find out the truth of H eaven and Hell . Note : For complete elaborations and different versions, see " The Bowl of Saki " under 9th March .
a) Part of two sentences in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Muria Best's and in Miss R . Jones's handwriting .
according to his evolution, so man knows the truth . And the mor e a man knows , the more he finds there is to learn .
b) See for complete elaborations and versions of the second sentence : Sayings I : "Gayan" Bola 73 . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 27th October .
According to his evolution , man knows the Truth ; and the more he knows, the more he finds there is to know .
Note : For complete elaborations and different versions of the first sentence, see "The Bowl of of Saki" under 29th March .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Muria Best's and in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
Man, filled with earthly knowledge, and what he calls learning , is often the knowledge only of names and forms and so has no capacity for the knowledge of truth or of God .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 28th October .
The man filled with the knowledge of names and forms has no capacity for the knowledge of Truth .
Note : For c o mclete elaborations and different versions, see "The Bowl of Saki" under 25th March .
68
69 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting .
But where man makes a mistake is that, when a man cultivates the heart he wishes to sow'the seed himself instead of leaving the sowing to God .
b) The same sentence as under a), in Miss R . Jones's handwriting .
But where man makes a mistake is , when he cultivates the hearts he wishes - - - - - etc .
c) An early typewritten copy .
but where man makes •i mistake is that when he cultivates the heart, he wants to sow the seed himself, instead of leaving the sowing of the seed to God .
d) ist ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 29th October .
Man mistakes when he begins to cultivate the heart by wanting to sow the seed himself instead of leaving the sowing to God .
a) Part of four sentences in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's and in Miss R . Jones's handwriting . As in the latter's version this passage was somewhat shortened, Nuria Best's more complete version is taken here as being the most original one .
Friends, we often start our lives as teachers , then it is hard to become a pupil . but there are many whose only difficulty in life is that they are teachers already . What one has to learn is pupilship . But he forgets that there is only one Teacher and that is God Himself .
b) An old typewritten version .
what one has to learn is pupilship . Friends, we start our lives as teachers, and it is very hard fOr us to learn to become pupils . There are many whose only difficulty in life is that they are teachers already . He does not know that there is but one Teacher, God Himself .
c) 1st ed . " The Bowl of Friends , we start our lives a s Saki " - 30th October . teachers , and it is very hard for us to learn to become pupils . There are many whose only difficulty in life is that they are teachers already . What we have to learn is pupilship . T here is but one Teacher, God Himself . Cf . "The Bowl of Saki " under 22nd and 27th March . Cf . Sayings I : "Gayan " - Sura 35 .
a) Two sentences in the All knowledge of the earth is as -lecture 'Truth', 13th clouds covering the sun . It is the Cont . a) 69
70 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) May 1921, in Nuria breaking of these clouds and it i s Best's handwriting . the clearness of the sky, or in othe r words, it may be called the purity o f the heart, which gives the capacit y for the knowledge of God . b) The same sentences as
C)
All knowledge - - - - - etc . - - - -
under a) in Miss R . Jones's handwriting .
breaking of these clouds of darkness , and it is the clearness oTthe sky _ or _ it may be - etc .
An early typewritten version .
All earthly knowledge is as cloud s dimming the sight, and it is th e
breaking of these clouds, in othe r words, the purity of the heart, tha t gives the capacity for the knowledg e of God to rise . d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 31st October .
Earthly knowledge is as cloud s dimming the sight, and it is th e breaking of these clouds, in othe r words, purity of heart, tha t gives the capacity for the knowledge
of God to rise . Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" under 23rd March .
a) Part of a sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921 , in Nuria Best's and in Miss R . Jones's handwriting .
and unless man is moved to that selflessness, he does not know justice, right, or truth, but his self stands above a*3 or between himself and God .
b) An early typewritten version has only the last part of the sentence .
Self stands as a wall between man and God .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 1st November .
Self stands as a wall between man and God .
a) A sentence in the lec- It is Patient pursuit which will ture 'Truth', 13th May bring the water from the depth of 1921, in Nuria Best's the ground that-even for one must handwriting . meet with the mede mould 1) i n digging, until one reaches the water of Love . b) As under a), - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - in Miss R .Jones's hand- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - writing . - - ground, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -mould 1) in digging, before the water of Life and Love canbound . Note 1) 'mould' may have been wrongly understood for 'mud' .
70
c) An early typewritten It is a patient pursuit to bring version . _ water from the depth o f Cont . c )
71 ORIGIN and elaborations :
Cont . c)
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
the ground, for one has to deal wit h much mud in digging_ before one reaches the water of life . No lov e is true love which has not deep roots .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 2nd November .
It is a patient pursuit to brin g water from the depth o f the ground ; one has to deal with much mud in digging before : one reaches the water of life .
a) Par t of several sentences in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's and in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
the process of this attainment i s a sincere research into Truth an d Life and an understanding of what I am and what the other man is . This , together with the contemplation o f God, a selfless consciousness and a continual pursuit to receive th e knowledge of God . The first and last lesson in love i s "I am not, and Thou art" and unles s man is moved to that selflessness, h e does not know justice, right or truth ,
See also "The Bowl of Saki", under 1st November : a) .
b) A revised typewritten In man's search for Truth, the first version, most probably lesson and the last is love . made from a) . There must be no I am, and Thou art not, no separateness, until man has arrived at that selfless consciousness, he does not know Love, Life or Truth . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of In man's search for Truth, the first Saki" - 3rd November . lesson and the last is Love . There must be no seoaration . No "I am, and Thou art not ." Until man has arrived at that selfless consciousness, he cannot know Life and Truth .
a) Part of a sentence in and it is by the power of prayer Inayat Khan's address to that man opens the doors of the heart mureeds at the first in which God the Merciful, abides . Service of the Church o f All, London, 8th May, 1921, in Joyce Burnett's handwriting . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of By the power of prayer Saki" - 4th November . man opens the door of the heart, in which God, the ever-forgiving, the all-merciful, abides . Note : The version under a) is to be found in the address to mureeds : 'Prayer', which originally Cont .) 71
72 ORIGIN and elaborations : Cont .)
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
became Religious Gatheka I no .5 .
a) A sentence in Inayat To be really sorry for one's error Khan's address to mureeds is really like opening the doors 'Prayer', given at the of Heaven . first Service of the Church of All, London, 8th May 1921, in Joyce Burnett's handwriting . b) The same sentence as - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -error s under a) in a type- is like opening the gates written version . of heaven . (Religious Gatheka I, no . 5) . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of To be really sorry for one's errors Saki" - 5th November . is like opening the doors of Heaven .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Our soul is blessed with the imS3ki" - 6th November . oression of the Glory of God whenever we praise Him . Note : For Origin, elaborations and different versions see "The Bowl of saki" under 21st March .
72
a) Part of two sentences in Inayat Khan's address to mureeds at the first Service of the Church of All, London, 8th May 1921, on 'Prayer', in Joyce Burnett's handwriting .
and his progress can only be made through life , as a little child learns to walk . He falls a thousand times before he can stand , and so many times falls again when he begins to walk, and so we human beings , however wise and great , we are not more than the child before God .
b) The same sentences as under a), in an unidentified handwriting .
- - - - - - - - - etc . - - - - - - - - - - - life as the little child learns to walk, falling thousan d - - - - - - - stand and after that falling again and again until at last he begins to walk, _ so we are no more than little children before God , -
c) A typewritten cony of the address on 'Prayer' - Religious Gatheka I no . 5 .
and his progress through life can only be made as a little child learns to walk . The child falls a thousand times before he can stand, and so many times he falls agai n when he begins to walk . We human beings are not more than the child before God .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 7th November .
As _
a child learning to walk, malls a thousand time s Cont . d)
73 ORIGIN and elaborations : Cont .
d)
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
before he can stand, and after that First part a) falls again and again unti at omitted . last he can walk, so are w e as littl e children before God .
a) A sentence in the address Self denial is not renouncing of on 'Prayer', 8th may things, it is denying _he self and 1921, evening, in an un- the first lesson of self denial is identified handwriting, humility . which could be a renorting . b) A reoorting of the same Self denying is not renouncing address by Joyce Burnett . Its first lesson is humility . Add . in Gd .'s handwrit- - - - - - - - - - - renouncing ing . (Cf . version a)) . th ings, it is denying the self . Its - - - - - - - c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Self- denial is not renouncing Saki" - 8th November . things, it is denying the self l and the first lesson of self-denial is humility .
1st ed . "The Bowl of The more elevated the soul, the Saki" - 9th November . broader the outlook . Note : See "The Bowl of Saki" under 3rd June .
a) Part of a sentence in Mastery lies not merely in stilling the lecture 'Stilling the mind, but in directing it towards the Mind', 1917-1920, whatever point you desire , reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Mastery lies not merely in stilling Saki" - 10th November . the mind, but in directing it towards whatever point you desire .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Our thoughts have prepared for us the Saki" - 11th November . happiness or unhanoiness we experience . Note : See "The Bowl of Saki" under 14th June an d cf . the saying under 23rd August .
No documents referring to the sayings unde r 12th - 15th November have been found in the archives to date .
73
74 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
lst ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 12th Novembe r
When the mind and body are restless, nothing in life can be accomplished . Success is the result of control .
1st ed . The Bowl of Saki" - 13th November
When speech is controlled, the eyes speak ; the glance says what words can never say .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Words are but the shells of thoughts Saki" - 14th November . and feelings . 1 ) Note 1) : Cf . "The Bowl of Saki" under 2nd June . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 15th November .
Wisdom is not in words, it is in understanding .
a) Part of a sentence in a lecture about 'The Message', 1921, as partly published in the pamphlet ' The Message', January 1922, and as in Gd .'s bookoreoaration of 'The Unity of Religious Ideals' .
the Message is like a spring of water, it rises and falls, and makes its way by itself .
b) 1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki" - 16th November .
The message of God is like a spring of water : it rises and falls, and makes its way by itself .
a) Part of a sentence in a lecture about 'The Message', 1921, as nublished in the namnhlet 'The Message', January 1922 .
If the eyes and ears are open the leaves of the tree become as the cages of the Bible ,
b) A typewritten copy of this sentence, found with Gd .'s bookorenaration of 'The Unity of Religious Ideals' .
- - - - - - - - - - - - -open-, the leaves of the trees become - - etc .
c) 1st ed . The Bowl of SAki" - 17th November .
If the eves and ears are open, the leaves of the trees become as _ pages of the Bible_
a) A sentence in a lecture For the Soul of All is one Soul, and about ' The Message', Truth is one Truth under whatever 1921 , as published in guise it may be hidden . the pamphlet 'The M essage' , January 1922 . b) A tvoewritten cony of this sentence , found with 74
because the soul of all is one s oul- and Truth is one Truth under
Cont . b)
75 ORIGIN and elaborations :
'DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) Gd .'s bookoreoaration of 'The Unity of Religious Ideals' .
whatever religion it is hidden .
C)
The soul of all is one souls and the Truth is One Truths under whatever religion it is hidden .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 18th November .
No documents referring to the sayings under 19th and 20th November have been found .in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 19th November .
Narrowness is not necessarily devotion, but often appears so .
1st ed, "The Bowl of Saki" - 20th November .
It is the soul's light which is natural intelligence .
a) A sentence in the lec- The wave is the sea itself, and yet ture 'The Message', 13th when the sea rises in the form of a January 1921, in Joyce wave, it is the wave, and when you Burnett's handwriting . look at the whole it is the sea . b) The same sentence as - - - - - - - - - - itself, _ yet published in the pamphlet - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -of a 'The Message' in January wave_ it - - - - - - - - - - - you 1922 . look at it as a Dart of the whol e it is the sea . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The wave is the sea itself ; yett Saki" - 21st November . when it rises in the form of a wave .it is the wave ; and when you look at _ the whole of it, it is the sea .
a) A sentence in a lecture It is not the solid wood that can 'The Message', 1921, in become a flute, it is the empty Joyce Burnett's handreed . writing . The same version was oublished in the oamohlet 'The Message', January 1922 . It was also found in a passage with Gd .'s bookpreparation of 'The Unity of Religious Ideals' . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 22nd November .
It is not the solid wood that can become a flute, it is the empty reed . 75
76 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
1st ed . "The Bowl of Reason is learned from the everchanging Saki" - 23rd November . world ; but true knowledge comes fro m the essence of life .
Note : For complete elaborations and different versions, see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 229 .
a) Part of a sentence in And in reality, God is within you and the lecture 'Prayer', as He is within you, you are th e 8th May 1921, evening, instrument of God and through you God in Joyce Burnett's hand- experiences the external world, writing . b) As under a), In reality_ God is within you, etc . in an unidentified hand- and ': 7-----------writing . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of _ God is within you . You are His Saki" - 24th November . instrument ; and through you He expresses Himself to the externa l
world .
it is according to the extent of a) Part of a sentence in the lecture 'Prayer', 8th your consciousness of prayer, that your prayer reaches God . May 1921, evening, in Joyce Burnett's and in an unidentified handwriting . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of SAki" - 25th November .
It is according to the extent of our consciousness of nrayer_ that our orayer reaches God .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Truth', 13th May 1921, in Nuria Best's handwriting .
So the heart that should be empty to receive the knowledge, is occupied by the knowledge that one ha s acquired .
b) As under a) , in Miss R .Jones's handwriting .
so the heart that should be open and ready to receive the knowledge_ one is occupied by the learning has acquired .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki*' - 26th November .
must be emvty in The heart order to receive the knowledge of God .
No documents referring to the sayings under 27th - 30th November have been found in the archives to date . 76
77 ORIGIN and elaborations :
1st ed . " The Bowl of Saki" - 27th November .
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
As long as in love there is "You" and "Me", love is not fully kindled .
1st ed . " The Bowl of Once you have given up your limited Saki" - 28th November . self willingly to the Unlimited, you will rejoice so much in that consciousness that you will not care to b e
small again . 1st ed .
"The Bowl of
The deeper your prayers echo in you r
Saki" -
29th November .
own consciousness , the more audibl e they are to God .
1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 30th November .
It is the depth of thought that i s powerful, and sincerity of feeling which creates atmosphere .
No documents referring to the sayings under 1st, 2nd and 3rd December have been found in the archives to date . 1st ed . "The Bowl of The higher you rise, the wider Saki" - 1st December . becomes the margin of your view . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Justice can never be developed while saki" - 2nd December . we judge others . The only way is by constantly judging ourselves . Cf . Sangathas 11-40 : Saluk, first sentence : 'Justice is developed by judging one's own actions, not those of others' . 1st ed . "The Bowl of Joy and sorrow are the light and saki" - 3rd December . shade of life . Without light and shade no picture is clear .
a) MS . Sr ., dated 1921, and a typewritten copy with sayings, mostly meant for publication in the "Gayan" (Gd .'s bookprenaration) .
Saying . The wise submits to conditions when he is helpless, bowing to the will of God ; but the evil that is avoidable he roots out without sparing one single moment or effort .
b)
The wise man submits to conditions when he is helpless, bowing to the will of God . But the evil that is avoidable he roots out without sparing one single moment or effort .
1 St ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 4th December .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Enviable is he who loveth and asketh for no return . b) 77
78 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) For complete elaborations and different versions, see Sayings I : "Gayan" Sura 18 .
C)
1st ed . "The Bowl of Enviable is he who loveth and asketh Saki" - 5th December . no return .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . To deny the changeableness of life is as fancying a motionless sea, which can only exist in one's imagination .
b) MS . Sr .
Saying .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - is like fancying - - - - - - - etc . c) A typewritten cony of Saying . sayings, mostly meant To deny the ehaageeblene,e changeabilfor publication in the ity of life - - - - - - - - - - etc . "Gayan" (Gd .'s bookoreoaration) . d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of To deny the changeableness of life SAki" - 6th December . is like fancying a motionless sea , which can only exist in one's imagination .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Learn) Live ) a true life and you will know
the truth . b) For complete elaboration s and different versions, see Sayings I : "Gayan" Bola 130 . C)
1st ed . "The Bowl of Learn to live a true life and you will Saki" - 7th December . know the Truth .
1st ed . "The Bowl of wisdom is attained in solitude . Saki" - 8th December . Note : For comnlete elaborations see Sayings I : "Gavan" - Bola 248 .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . The seeming death is the real birth of the soul .
b) For complete elaborations and different versions, see Sayings I : "Gayan" 78 Chala .96 .
C)
79 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The seeming death of the body is the Saki" - 9th December . real birth of the soul .
a) Copied by Gd . from (?) Inayat Khan add . 'Saying' over it .
Sa in . As the rose blooms amidst thorns, so the great souls shine out through all oppositions .
b) A typewritten copy of sayings, mostly meant for publication in the "Gayan" (Gd .'s bookpreparation) .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 10th December .
As the rose blooms amidst thorns, so great souls shine out through all opposition .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . When the artist loses himself in his art, it is then that his art comes to life .
b) Copied by Gd . from M .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - art then the art comes -
c) A typewritten cony with Saying . sayings, mostly meant - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - for publication in the art , then - - - - - - - - - - - etc . "Gayan" (Gd .'s bookpreparation) . d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of When the artist loses himself in his Saki" - 11th December . art, then the art comes to life .
Cf . Sayings I : "Gayan" - Chala 31 .
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Do not do anything with fear, and fear not whatever you do .
Fear not whatever you do . Do not do what you are afraid of doing . b) MS . Sr ., dated 1921 . First version a) .
Do not do anything with fear_ and fear not whatever you do .
c) Copied by Gd . Inayat Khan add . 'Saving' over it .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - fear, and fear not.- whatever you do .
d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 12th December .
Do not anything with fear; and fear not whatever you do . 79
80 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Notebooks 1921
Saying . Love develops into the harmony and in the harmony is born beauty .
:
b) See for complete elaborations : Sayings I, "Gayan" - Bola 200 . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 13th December .
Love develops into harmony, and of - harmony is born beauty .
a) Notebooks 1921 :
Saying . Who keens no secrets has no depth in his heart . Saying . The heart that cannot keen secret is like a vessel upside down .
b) For complete elaborations and different versions, see Sayings I - "Gayan " - Bola 247 . c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 14th December .
He who keeps no secrets has no depth in his heart .
ist ed . "The Bowl of Behind us all is One Spirit and One Saki" - 15th December . Life ; how then can we be happy i f our neighbour is not also happy . Note : For complete elaborations and different versions, see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 123 .
a) Some sentences in the lecture 'what the Mystic wants to attain', 11th June 1921, in M .elle Lefebvre's handwriting (a reporting of the simultaneous translation in French) and annotations in English, made by Sr .
80
Miracle of Christ, walking on the water . in Sanscrit life is pictured as a sea always making waves, you can never stop it . Everyone is trying to stop the waves = intoxication = bewildermen t
b) Copied by Gd . together with other sentences from lectures, mostly meant for oublication in the "Gayan" .
The sea of life is continually in motion, no-one can stop its unending waves . The Master walks over the waves, while the wise swims in the water, but the ignorant is drowned in his effort to cross .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 16th Decembe r
The sea of life is in constan t motion, no one can stop its ever-moving Cont . c)
81 ORIGIN and elaborations : Cont .
c)
DIFFERENT VERSIONS ;
waves . waves . water, in his
The Master walks over the The wise man swims in the but the ignorant man is drowned effort to cross .
Cf . Gatha Symbology (Nakshi Bandi) 111-2 : 'Christ walking on the water', 4th May 1921 .
a) A sentence in the lec- But man's greatest privilege i n ture 'The Privilege of life is to become a suitable instrument being human', 20th June of God . 1921 (Social Gathek a no . 17) of which .fragments were reported by Sr . This lecture was also found in Gd .'s handwriting and may well be a reporting . b) Copied by Gd . together M an's greatest privileg e with other sentences is to become - - - from lectures, mostl y meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
- - - etc .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Man's greatest 'rivilege is to Saki" - 17th December . become a suitable instrument of God .
a) A sentence in the lec- The trees in the forest await tha t ture 'The Privilege of blessing being human', 20th June 1921 (Social Gatheka no . 16) of which fragments were reported by Sr . and a copy was found in Gd .'s handwriting, probably a reporting . b) Copied by Gd . together The trees of the forest with other sentences await God's blessing . from lectures, mostly meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
sile ntly
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The trees of the forest silently Saki" - 13th December . await God's blessing .
a) MS . Sr ., dated 1921 . The plain truth is too simple for the seeker after complexity who looks for things that he cannot understand . b) Copied by Gd . together Saying . with other sentences - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - from lectures, mostly - - - - - - - - -complexity, wh o Cont .
b)
81
82 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) meant for publica- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . tion in the "Gayan" . c) Copied by Ng . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - who is looking for things he - etc . d) 1st ed . "The Bowl of The plain truth is too simple fo r Saki" - 19th December . the seeker after complexity,, who is looking for things he cannot understand .
a) A sentence in a lecture of 1921 of which Sr . made annotations .
Often man impresses himself with a failure, he says my life was a
b) Copied by Gd . together with other sentences from lectures, mostly meant for publication in the "Gavan" .
Saying . An unsuccessful man often keeps away success by the impression of his former failure .
C) 1st ed . "The Bowl of S&ki" - 20th December .
An unsuccessful man often keeps success away by the impression of his former failures .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Privilege of being human', 20th June 1921 (Social Gatheka no . 16) of which fragments were reported by Sr .
Man himself is the tree of desire and the root of that tree is in his heart .
A copy in Gd .'s handwriting, probably a reporting .
failure and he denies always something that is different from failure, the success .
it is man himself who is the tree of his desire and the root of the tree is in the heart of man .
b) Copied by Gd . together with other sentences from lectures, mostly meant for publication in the "Gavan" .
Saying . Man himself is the tree of desire and the root of that tree is his heart .
c) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 21st December .
Man himself is the tree of desire, and the root of that tree is in his own heart .
1st ed . "The Bowl of with goodwill and trust in God, selfSSki" - 22nd December . confidence, and a hopeful attitud e towards life, a man can always win his battle, however difficult .
82
Note)
83 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Note : For complete elaborations and different versions, see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Chala 168 .
a) Three sentences in the These four are diverse paths! lecture 'The Journey to And each considers his own the best the Goal', 1917-1920, re- and wisest . Ported and revised by Let each choose the way that belongs Dr .Gruner as published to his own temperamen t
in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of There are many paths , Saki" - 23rd December . and each man considers his own the best and wisest . Let each one choose that which belongs to his own temperament .
a) A sentence in the lec- Failure means that there has been ture 'The Journey to the lack of self-control - whether it be Goal', 1917-1920, re- a failure in affairs or in health . ported and revised by
Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Failure, either in health or affairs, SAki" - 24th December . means there has been lack of self-
control .
a) Two sentences in the lec- Love is the water of the Ganges . It ture 'The Journey to the is in itself a purification . Goal', 1917-1920, reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as publishe d in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Love is as the water of the Ganges ; Saki" - 25th December . it is in itself a purification .
a) Two sentences in the Life is unlimited and it wants a lecture 'The Presence scope to expand and rise . Without of God', 1917-1920, re- that scope, life is unhappy . ported and revised b y Dr .Gruner as publishe d in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/ 1921 .
b)
83
84 ORIGIN
and elaborations :
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 26th December .
DIFFERENT VERSIONS : Love is unlimitedl but it needs scope to expand and rise ; without that scope_ life is unhappy .
a) Part of a sentence in the and every wave, as it rises upward, lecture 'The Presence of seems to be stretching its hands God', 1917-1920, re- upward as if to say "take me up, take ported and revised by me up, higher and higher" . Dr .Gruner as publishe d in the book ' In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 27th December .
E very wave of the sea, as it rises , seems to be stretching it s hands upward s, as if to say _take me uo_ higher and higher_ .
a) From a lecture, "The True pleasure lies in the sharing Will, Human and Divine", of joy with another . 24 Oct . 19 19 , published in 'In an Eastern Rosegarden", 1920/1921 . b . 1st ed . "The Bowl of True pleasure lies in the sharing Saki" - 28th December . of joy with another .
a) Two sentences in the The gain or loss which is momentary lecture 'Gain and Loss', is not real . 1917-1920, reported and If we knew the realities we should revised by Dr .Gruner as never grieve over the loss of any published in the book things which experience shows to b e In an Eastern Rose- only of transient character . garden', 1st ed . 1920 / 19 21 . b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of A gain or loss which is momentary Saki" - 29th December . is not real ; if we knew realities we should never grieve over the loss of anything_ which experience shows to b e only transitory .
a) A sentence in the lec- The soul is as great as the circle of ture 'The Spiritual its influence .
Hierarchy, 1917-1920, reported and revised by Dr .Gruner as publishe d in the book 'In an Eastern . Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . 84
b)
ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
85
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of A soul is as great as the circle of Saki" - 30th December . Its influence . Cf . the lecture 'On Spheres', 1920, parts of which were nublished in the Magazine 'Sufi' of October 1920 .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Presence of God', 1917-1920, reoorted and revised by Dr .Gruner as published in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 .
Handiness only lies in thinking or doing that which one considers beautiful .
b) 1st ed . "The Bowl of Saki" - 31st December .
lies in thinking or Happiness doing that which one considers beautiful .
85
87
P A R T T W O HITHERTO UNPUBLISHED SAYINGS .
87
89
INTRODUCTION TO PART TWO . aaaoaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaca a
This Dart consists of hitherto unpublished') savings and other words of Inayat Khan, found in the manuscripts mentioned hereafter and grouped together in the following way : sayings 1 -
35 a from Inayat Khan's Notebooks, with elaborations in the handwriting of one or several mureeds and classified by Inayat Khan ;
sayings 36 - 50, from MSS . or copied texts, with elaborations in the handwriting of one or several mureeds and classified by Inayat Khan ; sayings 51 - 120, from Inayat Khan's Notebooks, with elaborations in the handwriting of one or several mureeds but not classified by Inayat Khan ; sayings 121 - 440, from Inayat Khan's Notebooks and his notes on loose papers ; no elaborations, no classification ; sayings 441 - 517, from MSS . or copied texts, with elaborations in the handwriting of one or several mureeds but not classified by Inavat Khan .
Note 1) : An exception was made for the sayings nrs . 508, 509 and 510, which were added to the Bolas (after .Bola 61) in later editions of the "Nirtan" . They are not found in the original "Nirtan" published by Kismet Stam, nor in the edition published by the Sufi Movement . (See Sayings I : Preface, pages XII/XIII) Another exception was made for some sayings published in old Sufi Magazines and pamphlets which are no longer available, and for one saying quoted by Ng . in her book 'The Way of Return' . These publications are mentioned with the saying in the left column . A number of savings are to be found in published lectures as e .g . in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden' . In such cases the sentences, when published, had not yet been turned into a saying and therefore are considered to be 'hitherto unpublished' as sayings .
89
91 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Notebook s
Saying . The artist does not imitate nature, he improves upon it .
b) MS . Gd .
Saying . - - - - - - - - not only imitate nature but he - - - - - - - .
c) Copied by Km .
Saying .
1 .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - naturet but he - - - - - - - . d) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Bol', meant for oublication in the "Gayan" . Alteration, probably in Mc .'s handwriting .
Bola .
The artist not only imitates nature, but he improves upon it .
2. a) Notebooks , probably of 1922 :
Bola . Once blessed is always blessed and once cursed is cursed for ever .
b) MS . Sk . (in shorthand and longhand), dated Summer 1922 . Copied by Km .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) Copied by sified by as 'Bol', published
Sh . and clasInayat Khan meant to be in the "Gayan" .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - - -
3.
a) Notebook s
Saying . What you cannot afford to do you must not do .
b) MS . Fm . Inayat Khan crossed out 'Bola' and wrote 'Saying' beside it, also altering the first part of the sentence .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - - - dot you
c) Copied by Km .
Saying .
Bela Saying . What you are not able to do, you
Chala . d) Copied by Sh . and clas- - - - - - - - - - - sified by Inayat Kha n as 'Chal', meant for oublication in the "Gayan" . Mc . changed the sequence of the two parts of the sentence .
You must not do what you are not able to do .
4 a) Notebooks
:
Dust atoms . We are the fairies of the earth, Cont . a)
91
92 ORIGIN and elaborations :
Cont . a)
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
in the air we always fly , We shine in the bright day light , when the stars are hidden in the sky .
We are the atoms of the dust , in the search of light we rise . We partake light from the sun , and give out as do the wise .
b) Copied by Gd . from (?) . Not in the form of a poem as under a) .
Alankara .
(Notes )
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - fly_ an d shine - - - - - - - - -day light _
when - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . We are specks of dust i n search of light we rise.- w e partake light from the sun_ and give - - - - - - - - - - - c) Copied by Km .
Alankara . (Notes )
as under b), only a comma added after
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . - - - - - - - - - - - of dust , i n
'dust' .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
d) Copied by Sh . and clas-
Alankara .
sified by Inayat Khan
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
as 'Alankar', meant for
- - - - - - - - - - - of dust _ i n - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
Publication in the "Gayan" .
Some alterations in We are the fairies of the earth ; in Mc .'s handwriting . the air we always fly ; and we shin e in the bright day lights, when the stars are hidden in the sky ; we are specks of dust floating in space rise_ and _ partake of light from the sun and we give _ as do the wise . Underneath this altered We are specks of dust text Inayat Khan wrote in- 9eereh -ef-the-fight the following lines, toward the sun we ris e again in the form of a nad-we- enrtnke -ef-fight- frern-tke-ean Poem and without ounc- And give out as do the wis e tuation marks . We partake and reflect light as always have done the wise .
5 a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying .
Do not resist evil . A good Person can never succeed in competing with the wicked, for the destructive power of evil destroys quicker than the constructive power of good can build . b) MS . Ng .
92
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - succeed when competing with the wicked ; for - - - - - - - - - - - -evil works quicker - - - - - - - - - - - - - of good . _ Cont . b)
93 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont .
_ R esist not evil 1)
b)
(
)
Note 1) : an illegible abbreviation in Ng .'s handwriting after 'evil' .
c) Copied by Km . without Saying . the sentence between - - - - - - - - - - - brackets .
Tala . d) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - - as 'Tall, meant for publication in the "Gayan" . One alteration in handwriting .
evi l ------------- evil more quickly
work s than the constructive
6 a) Notebooks
:
Bola . Friend is a friend first and last .
b) MS . Fm . Copied by Km .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) Copied by Gd . d) Copied by Sh . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Boll, meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Bola .
Then crossed out, most probably by Mc .
7 a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Friendship is more secure when friends keen distance .
b) MSS . Mf . and Zr Copied by Km .
Saying . Friendship is secure at a distance .
c) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Boll, meant for nublication in the "Gayan" .
Bola .
a) Notebooks 192 1
Saying . As difficult it is to keep friendship, so easy it is to break it .
b) Conied by Km . from (?) .
Saying . It is difficult to make a real friendship, and it is easy to break it .
c) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Tal ', meant for nublication in the " Gayan" .
Tala . - - - - - - - - - - - -
8.
d)
93
94 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
d) A typewritten copy It is easy to tie a knot of attachtogether with other ment, but it is difficult when you sayings (Gd .'s bookwish to unravel it . 1) It is difficult preparation for the to create a real friendship_ and it Gayan, with corr . by is easy to break it . Inayat Khan and some notes by Gd . (The heading "Gayan" is written by Gd .) . Inayat Khan wrote in the margin : 'two sayings' . Note 1) : see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Tala 29 . 9
a) Notebooks 1921 :
Saying . HeathenYou cannot love the God of reality, you can only love the God you make .
b) MS . Sr . Heathen Saying . Copied by Km . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - you have made . c) Copied by Ek . and clas-
Bola .
sified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - - as 'Bol', meant for oub-
.
lication in the "Gayan" .
10
a)
Notebooks
:
Grass blades, why do you stan d shoulder to shoulder? In defenc e against the invasion of the sweepin g wind .
b)
MS . Sd .
Tana . Grassblades, why do you stand
side
by side ? Answer : in defence against the in vasion by the sweeping wind .
c)
Copied by Gd .
Tana . Blades of grass , - - - - - - - - Answer . I n defence against vasion - - - - - - - - - -
d)
Copied by Sh . and classified by Inayat Than
Tana . - - - - - - - - - - - -
in -
.
as 'Tan or Verna', mean t
for publication in th e "Gayan" . Version as un-
der b) . Mc . crossed out two words,
Grassblades, - - - - - - - - - side ? in defence against _ in vasion by the sweeping wind .
11 a)
Notebook 1914/1915
:
A welcome visitor in the house 1 ) gives more joy than a beautifu l comfor t
furniture . 94
95 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Note 1) : the four preceding words are not very clearly legible in the notebook . b) MS . Gr . Copied by Km .
A
Saying . welcome guest in the house gives more comfort than _ beautiful furniture .
c) Copied by Ek . and clasChala . sified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - - as 'Chal', meant fo r publication in the "Gayan" . d) A typewritten copy which seems to be Gd . 's book- . preparation of th e "Gayan" .
.
Bola .
------------
12 . a) Notebooks
:
b) MS . Fm .
Saying . It is the hungry who really enjoy food . Bola . It is the hungry, who _- enjoy food .
Inayat Khan crossed Be3a- Saying . out 'Bola' and wrote T he hungry_ _ can enjoy 'Saying' instead, and food . altered the sentence a little . c) Copied by Km .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - -
d) Copied by Sh . and clasBola . sified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - - as 'Boll, meant fo r publication in the "Gayan" . Two words were added The hungry can in Mc .'s handwriting . food .
.
alone fully enjoy
13 . a) Notebooks
:
Alankara . My kindness, thy beautiful countenance seldom changeth into the face of a witch .
b) Copied by Ng . from (?) . Alankara . My kindness ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -changeth _to the face of a horrible witch . c) Cooled by Ek . and clasAlankara . sified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - - as 'Alankar', meant fo r publication in the "Gayan" .
.
95
96 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Notebooks :
My kindness, often on thy return thy beautiful countenance changeth into the face of a witch .
a) Notebooks 192 1
Saying . Bola . All that covers man's eyes from reality is forbidden .
14 .
15 .
b) MS . Sr . Copied by Kf .
- - - - - - - - - - - -
c) MS . Gd . Inayat Khan wrote 'Bola' over it .
Bola .
d) Copied by mt . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Sur ', meant for publication in the " Gayan" .
Sura . - - - - - - - - - - - -
In Mc .'s handwriting was written underneath
- - - - - - - - - - - -
All that covers reality from man's eyes is forbidden .
e) A typewritten copy with sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" (Gd .'s bookpreparation) : first version under d) .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - -
a) Notebooks 192 2
It is better that a mistake is found out before it is made than after .
b) MS . Sk . dated Summer 1922, in shorthand and her transcription of it .
Saying . A mistake rather be realised before than after it is made .
c) In Sk .'s handwriting (version a ), with a reference to the version in shorthand as under b) .
Saying . It is better that a mistake is found out before it is made than after .
d) The two sentences were copied by Sk .
Saying . A mistake rather be realised before than after it is made .
16 .
It is better that a mistake is found out before it is made than after . Sk . crossed out the word 'rather' in the first sentence , and inserted it after 'realised' .
A mistake rather be realised rather before than after it is made .
Mc . crossed out the first sentence and wrote 'duplicated' in the margin . e) Second version d) copied by Km . 96
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - is made, than after . f)
97 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
f) Copied by Sh . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Chal', meant for publication in the "Gayan" . Alterations in Mc .'s handwriting .
Chala . - - - - - - - - - - - -
a) Notebooks 192 2
Saying . The slightest mistake in time would turn into a greatest folly as a small hole in a garment soon becomes a large hole .
It is better to find out a mistake before it is made, than after wards .
17 .
b) Copied by Ek . from
M .
c) Copied by Km .
Saying . The slightest mistake would - - - - - - - - - - - - - -folly in time as a small hole in the garment would turn in time into a -large one . Saying .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - time , as ------------- etc .
Altered by Inayat Khan .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - -garment would in time become d) Copied by Sh . and classified by Inayat Khan
larg e
Chala . - - - - - - - - - - - -
as 'Chal', meant fo r oublicatio n in th e "Gayan" Changed in Mc .'s handwriting,
The slightest mistake if no t corrected will in time turn into the greatest folly just as a small tea r in a garment enlarges if not mended .
18 a) Notebooks 1921
:
Tana . Cruel orchids, how could you eat your admirer ? Beauty always lives on its lover's life .
b) Copied by Ng . from M . Underneath her copy is written in Sk .'s handwriting : 'different in Gayan' . Copied by Km .
Tana . orchid feed How could you upon your admirer ? "Beauty lives on its lover' s
c) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Kha n as 'Tan or Verna', meant for publication in the "Gayan" . Mc . Put 'Orchid ' between
Tana . - - - - - - - - - - - - -
life .
How could you,
Orchid , feed - etc . Cont . c) 97
98 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . c) commas . 19 . a) Notebook s
Saying . You will attract the-werld people by smiling and will frighten them away by weep4ng sighing .
b) Copied by Ng . from (?) .
Tala . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - smilingt but will - - - - - - etc .
c) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Tal', meant for oublication in the " Gayan" .
Tala .
a) Notebook s
A good person without good manner is like an uncut diamond .
b) Copied by Ng . from (?) . Copied by Km .
Saying . - - - - - - - without a good - etc .
c) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Chal', meant for Publication in the "Gayan" .
Chala .
- - - - - - - - - - - -
20 .
Two alterations in Mc .'s handwriting .
- - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - - - - - without _ good manners is like - - - - - - -
21 . a) Notebooks
Saying . The greatest problem of the world will be solved from the day, when woman will no longer be man's own property and man will not be counted among woman's belongings .
b) MS . Ng . Copied by Km .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - solved on the day_ when the woman will not be man's own oropertyl and - - - - - - etc .
c) Copied by Ek . and clasChala . - - - - - - - - - - - sified by Inayat Kha n as 'Chal', meant for publication in the "Gavan" . Changed in Mc .'s handwriting .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -be solved when a woman will not be considered a man' s property, and when a man - etc .
22
a) Notebooks 1922 98
Saving . The good reputation begins as a bud Cont . a)
99 ORIGIN and elaborations ;
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a )
and blooms
b) Copied by Gd . from (?), and copied by Km .
Saying . Good - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
as a rose .
Chala . c) Copied by Sh . and clas- - - - - - - - - - - - sified by Inayat Kha n as 'Chal', meant for publication in the "Vadan" . Mc . added 'A' to it .
A good - - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
23 . a) Notebooks
Tala . What is said is said, what is done is done .
b) MS . Zr .
Tala . Tala . What has been has been, what will be will be .
c) Copied by Ng . as one Tala .
Tala . What is said is said, what is done is donet what has been has been, and what will be will be .
d) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Tal' . Probably meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Tala .
a) Notebooks
The sea
: What does thou bring that maketh me so intoxicated ?
The sea
: What givest me thou that maketh me so intoxicated .
24 .
Wind (smilingly) b) Copied by Ek . from (?) and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Tan or Verna', meant for publication in the "Vadan" or 'Cavan" . Mc . altered the punctuation marks .
: Wine .
Tana . The sea
: What givest thou me that maketh me so intoxicated ? The winds (smiling_) _ Wine . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The wind_ _smiling_ "Wine" .
25 . a) Notebooks 192 2
b) Copied by Ek . from (?), and copied by Km . c) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan
Saying . When selfinterest causes you to do a deed of beneficence, its virtue vanishes . - - - - - - - - - - - - Sura .
- - - - - - - - - - - - Cont .
c)
99
100 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . c) as 'Sur ', meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
26 . a) Notebook s
b) Copied by Ek .
Saving . Sins of the youth pursue man to his grave .
from .(?)
Saying . The sins of the youth often pursue man to his grave .
c) Copied by Km . Saying . and a typewritten copy The sins of his youth - - - - etc . with sayings (Gd .'s bookpreparation of the "Gayan" . ) d) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Sur', meant for publication in the "Gayan" . Mc . crossed out one word .
Sura . The sins of the youth s man to his grave .
often pursue
- - - - -of _ youths - - - etc .
27 . a) Notebooks 192 2
b) Copied by Ek .
Saying . Stupidity is caused by inharmony in one's being and life .
from (?) .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - being or in one's life . Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - -
Inayat Khan crossed out the last four words .
Stupidity is caused by inharmony in one's being
c) Copied by Kin .
d) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Kha n
Chala . - - - - - - - - - - - -
as 'Chal', meant for publication in the "Gayan" . In Mc, 's handwriting the saying was crossed out and replaced . Then she wrote in the margin : 'Omit' .
Stupidity is nothing but the result of the lack of inharmony in one's being .
28 a) Notebooks 1921
100
:
Saying . To guard anything jealously one must certainly value it .
b) Copied by Gd . from (?) Inayat Khan added 'Saying' to it . Copied by Km .
Saying .
c) Copied by Ek . and clas-
Bola . Cont . c)
101 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . C) sified by Inayat Khan as 'Bol ', meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
29 a) Notebooks 1922
:
Saying . Abstain from tyranny if you possess any power .
b) Copied by Gd . from (? )
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) Copied by Km .
Saying .
Refrain from - - - - - - - - etc . d) A typewritten copy with sayings (Gd .'s bookpreparation of the "Gayan") .
Saving .
e) Copied by Sh . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Bol', meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Bola .
a) Notebook 12th May
Saying . A verse without a twist in it is like food without flavour .
30 . 19th April 1923 :
b) Copied by Ng . from (?) . (together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan") .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - twist is like an unflavoured dish .
Copied by Km . Chala . c) Copied by Ek . and clas- - - - - - - - - - - sified by Inayat Kha n as 'Chal', meant for publication in the "Gayan" . One word changed i n Mc .'s handwriting .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - is like an unseasoned dish .
31 . a) Notebooks
Tana . Waterlily, what are you ? I am the soul of the water lake .
b) Copied by Ng . from M . Underneath her coot/ is written in Sk .'s handwriting : 'different in Gayan' . Copied by Km .
Tana . Waterlily! What relation are you to this Lake ? "I am its sou l
Tana . c) Copied by Ek . and clasWater-lily! - - - - - - - - sified by Inayat Khan as 'Tan or Verna', meant for publication in the "Gayan" . Cf . Sayings I : "Gavan" - Tana 4 .
etc .
101
102 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Notebooks 1922 :
Saying . What passeth beyond words that the eyes can express .
b) MSS . Mf . and Z r
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - eyes _ express .
32
In MS . Mf . Gd . crossed out one word .
What passeth words - - etc . Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) Copied by Km .
d) Copied by Ek . and clasChala . sified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - as 'Chal', meant fo r publication in the "Gayan" .
.
Add . in Mc .'s hand- what passe s beyond wordst that - etc . writing . Cf . Sayings II : Part Two no . 112 .
33 . a) Notebook s
Saying . When the foolish offend it is a fault, but when the wise hurt another by their clever ways it is a sin .
b) Covied by Gd . from (?) .
Saying . - - - - - - - - -offends it is his fault but when the wise hurts another by his clever - - - - etc .
c) Copied by Km .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - faultt but - - - - - - - - - etc .
d) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Boll, meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Bola .
When the foolish offendst it is - etc .
34 a) Notebooks 1922
:
Saying . Tradition is that which time alone can make .
b) Copied by Ek . Saying . and copied by Km - - - - - - - - - - - - A typewritten copy (Gd .'s bookoreparation of the "Gayan" . ) c) Copied again by Ek . and Chala . classified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - - as 'Sur', and also a s
'Chal', meant for pub-
Sura .
lication in the "Gayan" . - - - - - - - - - - - -
102
Mc . cancelled the sayin g under 'Chal' and wrote Cont . c)
103 ORIGIN and elaborations : Cont . c ) ' duplicated' over it . Inayat Khan changed the whole saying, where it was found as 'Sur' .
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Sura . Tradition has its own value and no learning wealth or power can make it except time .
35 . a) Notebooks
:
Saying . The world will smile on your success and will laugh at your failure .
b) Copied by Ng . from l?) . Tala . - - - - - - - - - - -- c) Copied by Ek . and clasTala . sified by Inayat Khan as - - - - - - - - - •- - 'Tall, together with othe r savings, meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
35A . a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . It is wicked to pick holes in people . It is clever to see through the subtle ways .
Note : For complete elaborations and versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Tala 22 .
36 . a) MS . Gd .
Saying . The profit that one makes by putting an honourable person in a helpless situation is as taking poison in the form of sweet .
b) Copied by Gd . and a typewritten cony with unclassified sayings, likely to be Gd .'s bookpreoaration of the "Gayan" at an early stage . c) Copied by Km . The first three words were crossed out and changed by Inayat Khan . d) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Sur', meant for nublication in the "Gayan" .
Mc .'s suggestions .
The profit made by putting an honourable person in e-diffienlty straits is A#ke a poison whieh- there in the Fo-rmof a sweet .
Sa in . - - - - - - - - - - - An advantage
taken by putting - etc .
Sura . An advantage taken by nutting an honourable person in straits is a poison in the form of a sweet . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -person in to straits is like giving a poison - - - - - . 103
104 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Copied by Ek . from (7), and copied by Km .
Saying . There is no difficulty which cannot be surmounted .
b) Copied again by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Boll, meant for oublication in the "Gayan" .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - -
37 .
The whole saying was crossed out by Mc ., who wrote over it instead :
Every difficult Problem has its solution .
38 . a) MS . Mf .
Saying . Gifts of gab 1) is a sign of illuminated soul .
The first three words were crossed out by Gd ., who replaced them by the word 'eloquence' . b) MS . Zr .
Eloquence
is a - - - - - - - - etc .
Saying . Gift of gab is a sign of an iluuminated soul .
c) Copied by Km . Eloquence is the sign (the altered version illuminated soul .
of the
under a) ) . d) Copied by Ek . and clas-
Bola .
sified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - as 'Boll, meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
.
Note 1) : The 'gift of the gab' is an existing colloquial expression for 'much talking' (Oxford Dict .) .
39 . a) MS . Zr .
Saying . To defend ourselves from our folly is as hoarding our fault in the safe of our heart, but admitting our error is like throwing it out .
b) Copied by Ng .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inavat Khan as 'Chal', meant for publication in the "Gavan" .
Chala . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -our faults in the safe of our own heart, - - - - - - etc .
In Mc .'s handwriting one - - - - - - - - - - - - - -folly word and a comma were is like hoarding - - - - - - - - - altered . -heart ; but - - - - - - etc .
40 . a) MS . Gr ., over which 104
Tala . Cont . a)
10 5 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) Inayat Khan added Avoid him who says he knoweth, and 'Tala' . knoweth not ; for he is a fool . Teach him who knoweth not, an d admits that he knoweth not ; for he is innocent . Honour him who knoweth, and says he knoweth not, for he is a Saint . Follow him who knoweth, and speaketh what you know not ; for he is the Messenger Prophet . b) Copied by Mt . and clasTala . sified by Inayat Khan Avoid him who saith he knoweth, and as 'Tal', meant for nub- knoweth not, for he is a fool . lication in the "Gayan" . Teach him who knoweth not, and confesseth that he knoweth nott for he is innocent . Honour him who knoweth_ and saith he knoweth not, for he is a saint . Follow him who knoweth, and speaketh what ye know nott for he is the prophet . c) A typewritten copy of Tala . savings under the heading - - - - - - - - - - - 'Tala' II . (Gd .'s bookpreparation for the "Gayan") .
.
41 a) MS . Gr .
Bola . As life is full of thorns try to make of yourself a rose .
b) Copied by Kf . Life is full of thorns., try and make yourself a rose . c) Copied by Mt . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Tal' . The saying was found in an envelope marked 'Tal' in Gujerati script ; a number of sayings in that same envelope have 'Sur' written over them in Gujerati . The envelope marked 'Sur', in which originally these may have been put, was found empty . Inayat Khan altered one word .
Tala . - - - - - - - - - - - - - -try to make of yourself - - - - .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - -try and make - - - - - - - - -
One word added in an u - - - - - - - - - - - -- thorns, identified handwriting . - - - - - - - - - - - - . d) A typewritten cony together with other sayings meant for Publication in the "Gayan", under the heading 'Bola'
but try
Bola . As life is full of thorns try to make of yourself a rose .
Cont .
d)
105
106 DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
ORIGIN and elaborations :
Cont . d) I . (Gd .'s bookpreparation) = version as under a) . 'As' was crossed out, probably by Gd .
Life - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
42 . a) MSS . Mf . and Zr .
Saying . Love guides its own way .
b) Copied by Km
Saying . Love finds
its own wav .
c) Copied by Ek . and clasBola . sified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - - as 'Boll, meant for pub-
.
lication in the "Gayan" . The saying was crossed out by Mc ., and in her handwriting was written over it instead :
'Rocks will open and make way for the lover .' 1 ) Note 1) : See 'Sayings I'
: " Gayan" - Bola 41 .
43 a) MS . Fm .
Bola .
What man makes is the personality of God, not His reality . b) Copied by Sh . and clasChala . sified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - - as 'Chal' .
. 2)
Note 2) : See for further elaborations and versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 11 .
44 . a) MSS . Mf . and Zr . Mf . writes 'crule' .
Saving . The kindest person can also be most cruel .
b) Copied by Km .
Saying . The kindest person can be also the most cruel .
c) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Boll, meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Bola .
45 .
a) Copied by Gd . from (?), Saying . together with other All is beautiful in its place, the sayings meant for oub- hair is beautiful on the head, not lication in the "Gavan", on the feet . b) Copied by Km . 106
-
-
-
-
Saving . -
-
-
-
-
-
Cont : b)
107 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) Khan .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - not on the sole of the foct .
Altered by Inayat
c) Copied by Sh . and classified by Inavat Khan as 'Chal', meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Chala . - - - - - - - - - - - - place ; the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --etc .
a) MS . Gd .
Bola . Be thankful for your privileges rather than proud of them .
b) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Bol', meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Bola .
46
47 a) Copied by Gd . from (?) . To be serious and yet pleasant Copied by Km . spoken is the sign of the wise . Inayat Khan added Saying . 'Saying' over Gd .'s copy . - - - - - - - - - - - b) Copied by Ek . and clasBola . sified by Inavat Khan - - - - - - - - - - as 'Boll, meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
.
Mc . changed one word, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - then combined this saying - - - -is the way of the wise . with another one . Note : For complete elaborations and different versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 150 .
48 . a) MS . Fm .
Saying . Everything leads to something .
Inayat Khan replaced 'Saying' by 'Alankara' first, then by 'Tana' instead . b) Copied by Gd . and by Km .
A3nnkera
Tana .
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Tana . - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) Copied by Sh . and clasChala . sified by Inayat Kha n as 'Chal', meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
49 . a) MS . Fm .
Bola . The tongue of flame was the sword of the prophets .
b) Copied by Km .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - Cont :
b)
107
108 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) Inayat Khan altered - - - - - - - flame is the - - etc . word . c) Copied by Sh . and clasBola . sified by Inayat Khan - - - - - - - - - - - - . as 'Bol', meant for publication in the "Gayan" . Mc . crossed out the whole sayings and underneath was written in her handwriting : 'It is the tongue of flame that speaks truth, not the tongue of flesh .' 1) Note 1) : See Savings I : "Gayan" - Bola 249 .
50 a) MS . Fm . Copied by K m
Tala . The mocking world will mock . The working souls will work .
b) Copied by Sh . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Tal', meant for rublication in the "Gayan" .
Tala . - - - - - - - - - - - -
a) Notebook 192 1
Saying . It is not the action in itself, it is the condition that makes it sin or virtue .
51 .
It is not the action in itself that is sin or virtue, it is the condition which makes it either one or the other . b) MS . Gd . , together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" . See the second version under a) .
Saying . It is not the action itself that is a sin or a virtue, but it is the condition that makes i t
so . Cf . Sayings I, Bola 33 .
"Gayan" - Bola 24 and "Nirtan "
52 .
108
a) Notebooks
Bola . Do not take advantage of anyone's weakness .
b) MS . Sk . , dated Summer 1922 .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - -
10 9 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Notebooks 1921
Phv . Every aspect of life wants sacrifices ,
53 :
while the immortal life wants your activity sacrificed, the mortal lif e wants your peace . b) A typewritten copy, together with other sa""ings originally meant for publication in the "Gayan" (Gd .'s bookpreoaration) .
Philosophy . Every aspect of life dem ands sacri fices, while the immort&1 life demands the sacri fice of your activity th e mortal life demands the sacrifice o f your peace .
a) Notebooks 1921
Message . Do not think that Christ was crucifie d because the people at that time wer e
54 . :
unevolved . No, it is most difficul t to live among people after risin g above their standard of goodness . I f Christ appeared to-day he would eve n now be out to the cross ; for Chris t cannot be without the cross . Chris t and cross both stand together . b) A sentence in the lecture 'The Message, partly published in January 1922 in the pamphlet 'The Message' .
Was Christ cru cified because the people of His time were unevolved? No! but because it i s always difficult to live amidst th e people above whose standard of goodness one has risen . If Chris t appeared to-day with the claim o f Christhood, even to-day He would b e .crucified . Christ cannot be without the Cross, nor can the Cros s be without Christ . Christ and C ros s both stand together .
55 a) Notebooks 1921
:
Message . The claim of Rissalat in man's lifetime is a burden which is heavier than the earth and heaven . It is only possible that his name be identified with the Spirit of Guidance, when he has passed away from the limitations of the life on earth .
b) A typewritten cony, to- Benin . Chala . gether with other The claim of Risalat in man's lifesayings meant for nub- time is a great burden, lication in the "Vadan" heavier than _ earth and larger (Gd .'s bookoreoaration than H eaven . of the "Vadan") . It is the fulfilment of the Message Also found with Gd .'s which must identify his name with bookoreoaration of 'The the Spirit of Guidance . Unity of Religious Ideals', Chapter 'Th e Messenger' . c) 109
110 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
c) Copied by Gd .
MS .
Message .
- - - - - - - - - - - 56 . a) Notebooks
Saying or Philosophy . Your bodily desire takes you away from your heart's wish and the wish of your heart separates you from your soul's longing, so by every lower desire man is pulled further down from the higher goal of his soul's longing .
b) The first part of this saying was published in "The Bowl of SAki", 1921, under 1st June . Note : See for complete elaborations and different versions Sayings II : Part One under 1st June .
57 . a) Notebooks
:
Saying . Let the devil sleep rather than be awake .
Note : See for further elaborations and different versions Sayings I : " Gayan " - Bola 22 . 58 . a) Notebooks 1921
Saying . It is difficult to keep wise, while it is easy to become foolish .
:
b) MS . Gd . , together with other It is difficult to be wise, and it sayings meant for pub- is still more difficult to act lication in the " Gayan" . wisely . It is easy to be foolish, and it is easier still to act foolishly .
59 . a) Notebooks
:
Saying . Disappointment is the discovering of the error of having built hope on the false object .
b) MS . Ng .,
Saying .
together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan ' .
Ry disappointment one discovers the fact that one had built a hone on a false objec t
60 . a) Notebooks 1921
:
b) MS . Sk ., -- - dated Summer 1922 . 110
Cf .
Peace and war both mean fight . -
Sayings I
:
-
-
-
-
-
-
:' Gavan" - Tala 31 .
-
.
11 1 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Notebooks 192 1
Saying . A life long effort is not sufficient to develop a kind nature .
b) Copied by Gd . from (?), together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" . Inayat Khan wrote in the margin : 'also Sangita III Suluk' .
Saying .
61 .
develop kindness in nature .
62 .
a) Notebooks 192 1
Ego . An ego whose vanity is fed by seeing someone love him, admire him, and go in agonies in his love, and him to see for himself and for others to see how lovable he is which grows even to such an extent that his joy becomes the torture of another .
b) MS . Gd . , together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Philosophy . There are egos whose vanity is fed by being loved and admired who grew in time so tyrannous that even the agony of a loving heart becomes their joy and amusement .
a) Notebooks
The The The and
b) MS . Ng .
Tala . - - - - - - - - - - - -butter ; the - - - - - - - - - - - honey ; the - - - - - - - - - - - wineand the - - - - - - - - - - - - -_- .
a) Notebooks 192 1
P .S . Expression ) Extension )
63 . essence of milk is butter . essence of flowers is honey . essence of grapes is wine, the essence of life is wisdom .
64 . of love spreads your influence, retention of love deepens your (spiri t (spiritoower
b) MS . Gd .
Ph . The outlet of the love impulse spreads out man's influence , and the control of the love impulse deepens man's personality .
a) Notebooks
Do not accuse another of his fault, Cont . a) 111
65 .
112 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
for it will only strengthen its root . Cont . a) . Do not accuse your friend of his b) MS . Mf fault, let him see it fo r himself , if not, your accusation will make him more firm in hault . Note :
See for complete origins, elaborations and different versions : Sayings I, "Gayan" Bola 39 .
66 . a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying .
It is the force of pursuit that opens the way . b) MS . in an unidentified Saying . handwriting, - - - - - - - - - - - together with othe r sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
67 . Saying . Do not chum even in fun with a monkey, for if you pat her, she will scratch you in return, if you kiss her, she will bite you in reciprocity .
a) Notebook s
b) MS . Sd . Copied by Km . , meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Saying .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - if you oat it, it will - - - - - - - - - - - -if you kiss it, it will - - - - - - - - - - etc .
68 . a) Notebooks 192 1
Bola . In reality God is man's own perfection .
b) Copied by Gd ., probably from her own MS .
Bola . ( Pagan ) God in reality is man's own perfection .
Inayat Khan crossed out the word 'Pagan' and replaced it by 'heathen saying', adding : 'also Sangita III' . In the margin Inayat Khan wrote : 'Sangita III - Tasauf' .
68A . a) Notebooks
:
God
has
Bola .
Heathen Saying .
one thing against .that is his name . 1 )
him
an d
Note 1) : See for complete elaborations and different versions : Sayings I, "Vadan" - Bola 32 . 112
11 3 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
69 . a) Notebooks 1921
: God makes the world and we make the moral .
See for elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Gayan" - Alapa 8 .
70 . a) Notebooks 1923
: God through His limitations judges you and forgives you out of His perfection .
See for elaborations and different versions : Sayings I : "Vadan" - Bola 27 . 71 . a) Notebooks 1922
: Even in goodness there must be no rivalry . Goodness must be done out of charity, not out of rivalry .
b) MS . Sk ., dated - - - - - - - - - - - Summer 1922 .
72 . a) Notebooks
:
Sura . Verily he alone is happy who occupies himself through life in giving happiness to others .
b) A stencilled copy of Sura . sayings for the "Vadan" - - - - - - - - - - - - -who is (Gd .'s bookpreparatior.) . occupied In giving happines s 73 . a) Notebook s
By diving deep into the heart of Islam what they found was the pearl of Sufism ; for Sufism, as water under the earth, can be found in the depth of every religion .
b) MS . Sk .
- - - - - - - - - - - -
c) Published in the pamphlet 'The Sufi Movement', first half 1924 .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . - - - - - -for Sufism, like water - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
a) Notebooks 192 1
Saying . Motto . The heart that receiveth the light from above is liberated .
b) MS . Gd .
Sufi Motto . The heart receptive to the divine light is liberated .
c) Copied by Gd
Sufi Motto . For Sufi Order .
74 .
Cf .) 113
114 ORIGIN
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
and elaboration :
Cf . Sayings I : "Gayan" - Suras 14, 15, 16 . Cf . Gatha Symbology, Series I no . 6 : 'The Symbol of the Sufi Order' . 75 a) Notebooks
1921
:
Saying .
The heart speaks louder than the spoken words . b) MS . in an unidentified
Saying .
handwriting over which - - - - - - - - - - - Inayat Khan wrot e 'Sayings', together with other sayings which originally may have been meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
76 a) Notebooks 1922
:
One
who fights his nature against his ideal is the saint . One who dominates his ideal under his realization of truth is the master . One who makes an ideal is a prophet . One who gives ideal to others is the Messenger .
Note : The first two sentences of this saying were published in the " Gayan" - Tala 51 . See there, in Sayings I, for elaborations and different versions of these verses : The last two sentenc were not published , but .they form part of one saying .
77 . a) Notebooks 1921
P .S . Every impulse is a power, every time when the will withdraws any wave of impulse, the withdrawal of the imoulse charges it with a new strength and life, so that in time the will of a Master-man makes him the Master of the sea which is constantly moving in the heart of man .
b) MS . Gd . , together with other Every impulse is a power in itself sayings meant for pub- and every time when the will withdraws an impulse the will is charged lication in the "Gayan " . with a new strength and life, which It is also Sangita I 121 . makes the selfmastered man master of No differences between all . a) and b ) have been underlined , as the , version under b ) was shortened and considerably changed . 114
11 5 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Notebooks 192 1
P .S . Every impulse, when breaks out uncontrolled , results into an accident, the reaction of which is serious .
b) Copied by Gd . from (?), together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Ph . Every impulse_ that breaks out uncontrolled results in_ an accident_ and reacts serious .
a) Notebooks 192 1
Saying . If you wish to be happy, avoid all inharmony in life .
b) MS . in an unidentified handwriting , together with other sayings, meant for publication in the " Gayan" .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - -
a) Notebooks
Life is a symphony and the action of every person in this life is the playing of his particular part in the music .
b) MS . Gd . , together with other sayings meant for Publication in the "Vadan" .
Chala . - - - - - - - - - - - -
78 .
79 .
80 .
Changed in Gd .'s handwriting and written by her in the margin : ,not sent yet' .
Life is a music, and - - - - - etc . - - - - - - - - - - - - - part in the symphony .
c) Copied by Gd . together with other 'Chalas' to be published in the "Vadan" .
Chala . - - - - - - - - - - - -
a) Notebooks 192 1
Saying . When the lips close , the heart sneaks .
b) MS . in an unidentified handwriting, with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - -
81 .
82 . a) Notebooks
:
Bola . Love's best expression is indifference .
Note : For elaborations and different versions see Sayings I, "Gayan" - Bola 108 . 115
116 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Notebook s
A man cannot understand woman's Point of view and a woman cannot have man's outlook on life .
b) MS . Ng . , together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Vadan" and "Nirtan" .
A woman cannot see from a man's point of view ; a man cannot have a woman's outlook on life .
83 .
In Gd .'s handwriting 'Tala' was written over it .
Tala . - - - - - - - - - - - -
84 a) Notebooks 1921
:
b) MS . Gd ., together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" . Also part of Sangita I - 121 .
P .S . When a person, keening his light high, directs another person to darkness, he fails , for his own light shows the man the right way . Ph . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - high_ directs another person in oath of darkness he must disappointed , for his own light show_ the person he directs the
the be will righ t
way .
85 . a) Notebooks 192 1
Saying . You cannot guide man on a wrong path with a lantern in your hand, even if you did so, he will not take the wrong road, for your lantern will show him the right road, if you did not .
b) MS . Gd . with other sayings, meant for nublication in the "Gayyan "
Saying (Alternative) . You cannot - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -hand . Even if you did so he - - - - - - - etc . - - - - the right one .
a) Notebooks 192 1
Saying . Man's atmosphere explains the condition of his soul .
b) MS . in an unidentified handwriting, together with other sayings with some add . and a corr . by Inayat Khan, found with the "Gayan' documents .
Saying . Men's atmosphere - - - - - - - etc .
86 .
116
117 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
87 . a) Notebooks 1921
:
Psychology . Man's heart is like a piece of ground, you may sow anything is it and rear it, when the fruit comes to, then man knows whether it was a sweet fruit or a poison .
b) MS . Gd . , together with other - - - - - - - - - - - - -• - - - - sayings mostly meant - - - - - - - - - - - - - - and rear for publication in the it . When the fruit comes then "Gayan" . we shall realize whether it was a sweet quit or a poisonous . Also Sangatha 1-2 2 and part of Sangita I 121 . 88 . a) Notebooks 1921
:
Characters . There are several sides to human nature and the idealist sees one and the best one - which often he exaggerates to himself and sometimes he makes a mountain out of a mo le hill .
b) MS . Gd ., Ph . together with other - - - - - - - - - - - - - - sayings, mostly meant - - - - - - - - - - - - sees one .for publication in the the best one , which he often "Gayan" . exaggerates and It is part of Sangita _ makes - - -- - - - - - - - . I-121 and the beginnin g of Sangita II .
89 . a) Notebooks 1921
:
Psychology . There are many sides to human nature and it depends which side of an individual's nature we touch, whether the right one which must answer our purpose or the wrong one .
b) MS . Gd . , together with other sayings, mostly meant for publication in the "Gayan" . In her handwriting this saying was added to the previous one . Also in Sangita 1-121 the two sentences appear as one single paragraph .
Ph . There are several sides to human nature and the idealist sees one, the best one, which he often exaggerates and makes a mountain out of a molehill . There are many sides to human nature and it depends which side of an individual's nature we touch whether the right one which must answer our purpose or the wrong one which may destroy it .
90 a)
Notebooks
1921
P .S . When the deeper side Coftman's natur?17
118 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a )
is touched, what is hidden in him manifests on the surface .
b) MS . Gd . , together with other sayings, mostly meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
Ph . - - - - - - - - - - - -
Sangita 1-121 .
91 . a) Notebooks 1922
:
Saying . . To find a Master aside even if one could meet a true man through life, it would be the greatest privilege .
b) MS . Mf . Saying . if you Coated by Km ., together To see a saint apart with other sayings meant meet with a true man in lif e for publication in the it must be considered your life's greatest privilege . "Gayan" . MS . Zr .
Saying .
- - - - - - - -apart.- if - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -life.it - - - - considered life' s
92 a) Notebooks
1921
:
The
Message . The Message is the answer to the cry of the individual and collective souls .
b) A sentence in an undated lecture 'Religion', given by Inayat Khan before the second half of 1921 . Gd . dictated this same lecture in 1921, probably in autumn, a t Geneva to Sk ., who took The divine Message is the answer to it down in longhand as the cry of souls, individually and 'Gatheka, Series I collectively . 1 ) No . 6' . c) Published in January , the Message is the answer to 1922 in a. pamohlet the cry of individual and collective called 'The Message', souls . which contains parts of two lectures on this subject .
118
Note 1) : This lecture has become 'Religious Gatheka No .3' and in Sr .'s handwriting exists the following annotation : 'There are older papers in which this Gatheka is not one of the Religious Gathekas, but one of the Gathekas . It appears as Gatheka Series I No .6 .' After 1927 Headquarters changed the original sequence of a part of the Religious Gathekas .
119 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
93 . a) Notebooks 1921 :
Poem . The Message is rising to fulness . The workers must answer the call . Good tidings to those who are wakeful, And blessing and peace be on all . God's Blessings and peace be on all .
b) MS . Zr . ,
first _part a) . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . And blessing and peace be to all . 94 . a)
Notebooks 1921
:
Message . The Messenger has five aspects t o his being : 1 . The Divin e 2 . The Idea l 3 . The Prophe t 4 . The Message-bearer, and 5 . The Message . All four aspects pertaining to th e
personality of the Messenger hav e been terminated for the future , leaving the fifth, the Message . b)
MS . Sr ., dated 1921 . (Notes taken down fro m Inayat Khan's words during the lecture) .
Five different aspects of the divin e
Message and the Message itself .
c)
d)
Differences as to the
1 . divine
version under a) have
2 . idea l
not been underlined .
3 . the prophe t 4 . the Message from Go d 5 . the message itself .
Dictated by Ng . to Miss
Message .
K . Belfrage .
1. - - - - -
1 . - 4 . : see version under a) .
2. 3. 4 . 5.
Published in 'The Unity of Religious Ideals' The Messenger (comnilation) .
- - - the
- - - - - - Teacher .
The Messenger has five aspects t o his being : (1) the Divine, (2) the Ideal, (3) the Prophet, (4) th e Message-bearer , (5) the Teacher . Four of these aspects have bee n terminated, so that now only one i s distinguished, which is the Teacher .
95 a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Every moment of life is an opportunity and who profits by it is wise .
b) MS . in an unidentified Saying . handwriting, together - - - - - - - - - - - - . with other sayings with some add . and a corr . Cont .
b)
119
120 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) by Inayat Khan, found with the "Gayan" documents . 96 . a) Notebooks 192 1
Saying . The reserve gives a weight to the personality . 1 )
Note 1 )
For see a), Cf .
elaborations and different versions Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 150 under b) and d) . Sayings II : Part Two no . 265 .
97 . a) Notebooks 1921
::
Saying . The one who says no is often stronger than the one who says yes .
b) MS . in an unidentified handwriting, together with other sayings with some add . and a corr . by Inayat Khan, found with the Gayan documents . The alterations already appear in the unidentified handwriting .
Saying . The one who can say : no is often stronger than the one who can say •.
a) Notebooks 192 1
Gamaka . People set 1) through me a chill when they show me their feeling against another .
yes .
98 .
b) Copied by Ng . from (?) . People send through me a chills when they exoress to me their feelings against another . Note 1) : Probably 'set' was written mistakenly for 'send' .
99 . a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Every person has his own way in life and that particular way is most suited to him .
b) MS . in an unidentified handwriting, together with other sayings found with the Gayan documents, in which Inayat Khan wrote some add . and a corr . The alteration already appears in the unidenti120 fied handwriting .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - way is more suited to him .
12 1 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
10 0 a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . The greater your sacrifice, the greater your reward .
b) MS . in an unidentified Saying . handwriting, together - - - - - - - - - - - - . with other sayings , found with the Gayan documents, in which Inayat Khan wrote some add . and a corr . Inayat Khan added one - - - - - - - - - - - - - - the word . greater is your reward . Cf .
Sayings II
: Part Two no . 113 .
101 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . In the path of sacrifice the further you proceed the greater is your gain .
Cf . Sayings II
: Part Two no . 113 .
102 a) Notebooks 1921
:
b) MS . Ng .
Saying . Satan has no power over you unless you give your wrist in his grip . Saying . -your wrist into his grip .
c) Copied by Gd ., together with other sayings, mostly meant for publication in the "Gay an" .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - your wrist in_ his grip .
103 . a) Notebooks 192 1
Message . Saum and Salat are not man-made prayers, they have descended from above and there is every power and blessing in them for those who believe .
b) Copied by Gd . from (?) .
Message . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - They - - - - - - - - - above as in every neriod of religions spiritual reconstruction the orayer was given and there is every power and blessing in them, especially for those who believe .
c) A typewritten copy of sayings meant for publication in the "Vadan" (Gd .'s bookpreparation of the "Vadan") .
Chala . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -They have descended from above, as in - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -the praye r Cont . c) 121
122 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . c )
was given and there is - - - - - - - - - - - in them especially -
d) A typewritten copy of five sayings under the heading 'The Message', found with Gd .'s bookpreparation of 'The Unity of Religious Ideals', a comnilation prepared by her .
The Message .
a) Notebooks
Battle with self and make peace with others .
b) Copied by Sk ., probably from her own MS ., to- . gether with other sayings meant for .publication in the " Vadan" .
Bola . Make battle with oneself and - - - -
a) Notebooks 192 1
Saying . The sense of honour is the sign of the noble, the one who has no respect for another indeed has no respect for himself .
- - - - - - - - - - - -
104 .
105 .
b) Copied by Gd . from (?), together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - noble . The one - - - - - - etc .
106 . a) Notebooks 1921
Psychology . You see the beautiful side of a person's nature when you are in a habit to see good and when your habit is to see evil, then the evil side of man comes before you .
b) MS . Gd . , together with other savings meant for publication in the •" Gayan" and the "Vadan" .
Philosophy . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -are in the habit of seeing it, but when - - then the - - - - evil in a person evil side of man Ts nature must mani fest before you .
c) Sangatha 1-12
107 . a) Notebooks
122
By silence comes inspiration, by fasting is produced ecstasy and by devotion is sweetened the personality , Cont . a)
123 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) by purification is brought a healthy life and by abstinence psychic and occult power - by higher deeds the heaven is brought on earth, and by knowledge can be united with God . b) A typewritten copy, over By silence comes inspiration, which was typed : 'in by fasting is produced ecstasy, Kismet's handwriting' . and by devotion is sweetened th e personality, by purification is brought a healthy life, and by abstinence psychic and occult power, by higher deeds the heaven is brough t on earth, and by knowledge one can be united with God .
10 8 a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . The cold silence is preferable to the hot words between friends which lead to lack of dignity and result in disagreement .
b) MS . in an unidentified Saying .
handwriting, together - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . with other sayings, lead to indignance and result - found with the Gayan - - - - - - - - . documents . Crossed out two words, The cold silence is preferable to probably by Inayat Khan . the hot words whic h lead to - - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
109 a) Notebooks 1922
:
Saying . Be resigned to the things of the oast which cannot be helped now .
b) Copied by Ek . from (?), and cooled by Km .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) A typewritten copy with sayings meant for cublication in the "Gayan" . (Gd .'s bookpreparation) .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - - -
a) Notebooks possibly 192 3
It is not enough to find out the ultimate Truth, what is most necessary is to hold the consciousness of reality .
b) Copied by Gd . with other sayings under the heading "Vadan" .
Chala .
110 .
-truth ; what - - - - - etc .
123
124 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Notebooks 1921
Teaching . If you will preserve my words as I have spoken , it will be as saving my life .
111 .
b) Sangita 1-17,
:
Wasiat . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - -spoken them , it will - - - - -
.
11 2
a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Words can never express what the eyes can sneak .
b) MS . in an unidentified Saying .
handwriting . - - - - - - - - - - - -
.
Cf . Savings II : Part Two no . 32 . 113 . a) Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . In the path of renunciation the further you proceed the greater your reward .
b) MS . in an unidentified Saving . handwriting, together - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - with other sayings, - - - - - - proceed, the greater found with the "Gayan" -
documents . Inayat Khan added one - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - word . - - - - - - - - - - the greater i s your reward . Cf . Savings II
: Part Two nrs . 100 and 101 .
114 . a) Notebooks 192 3
With no one am I intimate for no one do I lon g my body, heart and soul to you I offer for your song .
b) MS . Sk . , dated Winter 1922/1923
- - - For - My - - - - - -
a) Notebooks 192 3
You have brought to me God 's secret my secret is to lov e No-one You of which no one on earth knows exeeet but angels heavens from above .
b) MS . Sk . , dated Winter 1922/1923
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -secrets, My secret is to love . You of which - - - - - - - - - - But Heavens - - - - - - -
-
- - - -intimate , - - - long. - - - - - - - - - You Your song .
115 .
124
125 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
a) Notebook s
There is no one who does not work for some profit, selfish or unselfish .
b) Copied by Gd ., together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Vadan", then crossed out, Probably by herself .
Bola . There is no-one who works for nothing , selfish or unselfish .
a) Notebooks
Saying . Innocence with intelligence is a true sign of spirituality .
116 .
117 . :
b) Copied by Ek . from (?) .
Saying . - - - - - - - - - - - •- - - is the true - - - - - - - - - -
Cf . Sayings II
: Part One under 27th February .
118 . a) Notebooks 192 1 Also found in Inayat Khan's letter to Mahtab van Hogendorp, Wissous, 7th July 1921 . b) Copied by Gd . from (?) .
On Viladat Day 1921 . The years of my life are Passing, leaving me behind to live a fuller and everlasting life after the Message I give . Poetry . 1921 . The years of my life are passing_ leaving me behind to liv e a fuller and everlasting life after the message I give .
119 . a) Notebook 19th April - Saying . 12th May 1923 If not saint, Satan, take some model to mould your life . b) Copied by Ng . from (?) .
Heathen Saying . If not Saint, Satan to mould your life .
T ake some model
120 a) Notebooks 1921
:
b) In slightly different
Message . The absence of the ideal facilitates the idealistic devotee to expand hi s ideal, but the Presence of the idea l most often hinders the devotee i n building his ideal, for the ideal o f imagination always excels the idea l who is living the life of limitations . The absence of the Ideal often make s
words this sentence
it easier for the devotee, and th e
appears in an undated lecture 'The Message', of which parts were published in January 1922
Presence of the Ideal makes it mor e difficult for him ; for the Ideal tha t grows and expands in his imaginatio n will always excel that enshirined i n 1a5 n
126 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) in the pamnhlet
Personality, however great, who i s
C)
'The Message' .
living on earth the life of limita tions .
A typewritten copy, with Gd .'s bookoreparation of 'The Unity of Religious Ideals' (a compilation
The absence of the ideal makes i t easier for the idealistic devotee t o make his ideal greater ; but the pres ence of the ideal most often hinder s
prepared by Gd .) .
the devotee in strengthening hi s
ideal . For the ideal that grows and expands in the imagination of th e devotee, will always excel the idea l personality which is living on eart h
the life of limitations . 121 .
Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . It is absurd for one to be alway s wise and not be foolish even once i n a while .
122 .
Notebooks 1924 :
I am that to every one, what h e thinks of me, for I am each and I a m all .
Notebooks
:
Saying . Perfect aristocracy is the tru e democracy .
Notebooks
:
Saying .
123 .
124 .
Even he who can fight an army,
find s
it difficult to fight the self . 124 A Notebooks
: Blessed is he who has seen his Life's purpose . Cf . Sayings I
: "Gayan" - Sura 1 .
125 In Inayat Khan's hand- The various aspects of Sufism can be written notes of aoorox . gradually revealed to the initiated, 1911, handed down by by the Murshad, the ever incarnating Murshida Martin to one universal reason, according to the of her mureeds, Mrs . intellectual development of the age Duce, who sent them in which he incarnated himself . partly to Sirdar va n Tuyll, and Partly to the Biographical Department on the latter's request in 1977 . 126 . Tassawuf . 126 To leave aught undone
for
the estee m Cont .)
127 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Cont .)
of
men
is
hypocrisy, and to do aught for their esteem is idolatry .
127 .
Tassawuf . Much is he beguiled who serves God for fear or hope, for His true service is for mere love . Serve God because you cannot help serving is for mere love's sake .
128 .
Sufism . Steering a mid-course between the atheism on the one hand and the deism on the other, the Sufi's cult is the religion of beauty, where heavenly perfection is considered under the imperfect type of earthly loveliness .
129 . Notebooks
Sex . The beauty of the immanence of God is most admired in the opposite sex .
130 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saving . Beauty you must regard from a distance , by touching and tempering with it , either you will cause harm to th e beauty or will bring ruination t o yourself .
Notebooks 1922
:
Saying . There is no beauty which cannot b e
131 .
surmounted . 132 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . To a spiritual being the whole world' s burden is light to lift, but to the
material person his own burden is to o heavy for him to lift .
133 . Notebooks 1921
:
Sura . Verily the believers are blessed .
134 . Notebooks
:
My
blessing extends to all (those . . . hearts) in the heart that is open, it enters and (it waits at the gate o f (it-stands-we#ting those whose heart is closed . 127
128 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Notebooks
I have drunk the bowl of poison which the seeker after perfection must drink .
135 .
136 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Born of a thorny branch the beautiful rose blooms .
137 . Notebook s
Whose brows are smiling and whose eyes have great lustre and who has an open visage , Gentle in action and thoughtful in soeech, he is a saintly soul, he is a sage . Whose heart is tender and who has great compassion, who stands alone and who gives others courag e know then he is the man who is friend of all , He is a saintly soul, he is a sage . Whose brows are smiling and whose eyes have great lustre and who has an omen visage , Gentle and thoughtful in all things he says and does , He is a friend of all, he is a sage . Who knows all things, yet is so simple, he suffers with all and gives them courage . He shares his good with the others .
Notebooks
:
Gentle and thoughtful in all things he says and does, he is a saintly soul, he is a sage . Wise and simple, who gives to the sorrowful ccnsole(ation) and comfort and courage . Life on earth to him is as a bird in a cage . His brows are smiling and his eyes have great lustre and he has an open visage , Gentle and wise he is in all he says and does , life on earth to him is as a bird in a cage , Knowing all things and yet he is so simple, that he suffers with all and gives them courage .
138 . Notebooks 1922
128
I bring to you the message of peace and leave you alone to calmly enjoy it . Cont .)
129 ySRSION :
ORIGIN : Cont .)
We
so
fondly
rise to welcome you, 0 wind, and so readily respond to your call, then we are ferseken left by ourselves to await your next coming . I come to you with the message of peace from above and pass away to let the sea be calm .
Note : It may be assumed that this is a dialogue between the wind and the waves . Notebooks
:
Waves . We rise and go forward to welcome thee and readily respond to thy call, then thou goest and we are left alone by ourselves . We so fondly respond to your call, o wind, but you go away and leave us in a gloom . Wind . I come unto you with wisdom's message and leave you alone to solve the riddle by yourselves . The Wind : I come from above with wisdom's subtle message and leave you alone to solve the riddle by yourselves . Cf . Sayings I
: "Vadan" - Tanas 10 and 18 .
13 9 Notebooks 1923
: If Christ child is accepted who came from a Jewish mother, you will certainly not refuse the divine message conceived in the womb of the Sufi esoteric school of ancient wisdom and born as the call to humanity to unite in one brotherhood .
Notebooks 1921
:
Py . When Christ was crucified, it was God Who was judged in the court of man .
Notebooks 1921
:
Claim of Perfection for the man with all sincerity and trueness, seems beyond his reach and it is best it was not claimed, but realised only .
14 0
141
142 .
Notebooks
Complexity results into simplicity .
129
130 VERSION :
ORIGIN :
143 . Notebooks 1923 :
Gamaka . Wherever I happen to be I feel it t o be in my own country, for I see m y Beloved everywhere and I am with Him
home . 144 . Notebooks
:
Saying .
By judging that what one learns, on e becomes a critic instead of a student . 145 . Notebooks
:
Death,
who
overcomes
thy
sting ?
The knower of life who is conscious . 146 .
Notebooks
: There is no death after once you die .
Notebooks
: A good deed is that which begins i n pleasure, continues in joy and result s
147 .
in happiness .
148 . Notebooks :
Tana . Devil, where do you find your location . In the head 1) a clever ma n In the eyes of a fascinating woma n In the hands of a greedy youth ,
And in the legs of a mischievous child . 2 )
Note 1) : Here one word was omitted . 2) : Cf . Sayings I
: "Gayan" - Tana 20 .
149 . Notebooks
1921
:
Saving . As the dewdrops help the bud t o
bloom, so the joy-tears help the heart to bloom .
150 . Notebooks
1914/1915
: The disorder in the health is caused by the irregularity of the ether , one of the five elements, also eithe r by congestion or by over-circulation .
Notebooks
1921
Saving . Observe all that is beautiful, bu t stay at a distance ; by getting clos e to it you limit your vision of beauty .
151 .
130
:
13 1 VERSION :
ORIGIN : 152 . Notebooks
1921
:
Sangatha . Py . In the dream the mind is like a mechanism which works on by itsel f without the direction of the engineer .
153 . Notebook April -
May 1923 :
Tana .
Earth, are you made to be my throne ? Yes, but your crown also .
154 . Notebook April May 1923 :
Tana . From where do you bring your beautifu l
jewels ? I lay my heart open to heaven so tha t the beauty of the heaven may be re -
flected in my heart . Note : The sayings written just before and afte r this one in the Notebooks are beginnin g with the word 'Earth,' .
155 . Notebook April -
May 1923 :
Tana .
Earth, how do you attract heaven ? I send him my love with the vapou r and he sends his answer Eby his tears .
156 . Notebook April May 1923 :
Tana . Earth, what is trodden beneath ou r feet ? What have you done to be trodde n
beneath our feet ? Tana . Earth, what . does make you lie beneat h our feet in such humiliation ? The unsteadiness of my character . Tana . Earth, what have you done to b e trodden beneath our feet ? I have deserved it for the unsteadines s of my character .
157 .
Notebook April -
Tana .
May 1923
Earth, what makes you lie beneath ou r feet ?
:
It appears so to you, in reality I raise even your feet above your head . 131
132 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
158 .
Notebook April - Tana . May 1923 : Earth, you are the floor of my house, but the roof also . 159 . Notebooks :
Alankara . Earth, you produce jewels, my heart produces ideas .
160 . Notebooks 1921
:
For Magazines . The modern education teaches to make the students best fitted to guard their own interest in life, instead of showing them how dependent is the interest of an individual upon the general interest .
Notebooks 1921
:
Question : When the end of the world will come, can you tell me ?
161 .
When the horns of the animals will turn into wings ,
When the beaks of the birds will become two lips , When the heart of man will turn into a blooming rose , And when woman's soul will become an eye , Then the end of the world will come . 162 .
Notebooks
Saying . All that ends well must begin well .
Notebooks
No one would do evil if he knew he was doing it .
163 .
Cf . Sayings
I
"Nirtan" - Bola 43 .
164 Notebooks 1921
132
:
Phy . At every fault the ego oushes the reason forward , out the fault on someone else , but at every thing rightly done, the ego readily raises its head to be crowned with the victory .
133 VERSION :
ORIGIN :
165 . Notebooks
Gamaka . I do not accuse anyone of his fault, for I leave him free to choose his own way, as I wish myself to be free .
:
166 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Favours from the undesirable sources have their interest a hundred times more than the amount received .
167 . Notebooks
:
Notebooks
:
Prayer . Fear comes in my heart when I half cover my eye s by dropping my eyelids and look down to earth and see the holes and the pits, but I have no fear when I raise my eyes and look to Thee .
168 . Saying . The one who fools his fellowman, wil l be fooled a thousand times over i n
return .
169 . Notebooks 1914/1915
In Fikar the word repeated in th e breath is engraved upon the soul a s a record .
Notebooks 1924
Pour out floods of love, yet keepin g your garment of detachment from bein g wet .
170 . :
171 . Notebooks
:
Saving . Verily the one who fools another , maketh himself a fool .
Notebooks
:
Foolish turns truth into false, wis e turns false into truth .
172 .
173 . Notebooks 1921
:
By forgiveness man goes forward, b y thought of revenge he goes backwar d and by remembering the harm done t o him by someone, man stands still .
133
134 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
174 .
Notebooks 1914/1915
: The form of every creature is made according to the needs of life .
Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Your best friend may harm you more than your worst enemy .
Notebooks 1922
:
Saying .
175 .
Most loving friend may act as your bitterest enemy . 176 . Notebooks
:
Notebooks
:
Gamaka . My best friend and worst enemy is my love .
177 . Saying .
Tread not love's path so far that ye may have to draw back . Saying . Tread not the path of intimacy so far . . . . . Do not go so far in friendship that you may have to step backwards in disappointment .
178 . Notebooks
:
Thanks
to
Thee,
o
Gardener,
for
the
thriving of hePplant of my life . 179 . Notebooks
:
Notebooks
1921
When
the
globe turns its back, the sun spreads its light through the heart of the moon .
180 . :
Saying . Do not fear God, but be conscientious lest you may diselensare displease in any way .
Note : See for origin, elaborations and different versions Sayings I : "Gayan째" - Bola 56 .
181 . A printed card which God grant you : Inayat Khan sent to the Thought that exoandeth, mureeds for Christmas 1925 . Feeling that deeneneth, Friendship that lasteth long, Love that changeth not , 134
Cont .)
13 5 ORIGIN :
VERSION ;
Cont .)
A treasure that ever groweth , Happiness that endeth not, Faith that reason cannot shake, Devotion that endureth all tests, Light that continually burneth, Life that liveth for ever . I .R . Blessing s from Murshid .
182 . Notebooks
1924
:
God is beyond all praise, if yo u wish to praise Him, you must mak e think of Him as an ideal man .
183 . If ever God is seen on the earth , it is in the one who hath spiri t divine .
Notebooks .
If ever is God seen in the world, i t is in you who reflect spirit divine .
184 . Notebooks
1921
Notebooks
:
:
Saying . Heathen . If you have not a God, create one .
185 . Saying . Rather God be without a temple tha n a temple without God .
186 . In 'Notes and Fragments' in Inavat Khan's handwriting, approx . 1911 :
Sufi Saving . They whom the God approaches mos t nearly, are the most severely tried .
Notebooks
1921
Saying . Those who imagine God as a just God , limit Him .
Notebooks
:
187 . :
188 . Even to carry out God's great wor k
tact and common sense is necessary . 189 . Notebooks
1921
:
Heathen Saying . God-ideal is the best ideal tha t human mind can create . 135
136 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
190 .
Notebooks
:
Notebooks
:
Alankara . Gold : I am the light of the earth .
191 .
He who shares his good with hi s fellows and sympathizes with them i n their pain , constant in friendship , he who always keeps his word, sin cere and faithful, who is above los s or gai n He who shares his good with hi s
fellows and who sympathizes with the m in their pain , Constant in friendship, he who alway s
keeps his word, patient and poise d through every loss or gain , He who is wise in all does, who in a moment can gauge , Ever forgiving and so the friend of all, he
he says an d man's characte r loving, he i s is the sage .
. . . . . and does in their pleasure s and pain by them stand .
Notebooks :
He who defends himself against a n accusation has justice weighing upon
his head . He who owns his faults as he shares his good with others, he is th e friend of all, he is the sage .
192 . Notebooks 1921
:
Sura . We have blessed you by extending Ou r hands from the trees in the forest , did you not see the thousand hand s blessing ? How the branches of the tree gree t
thee bending and stooping down t o the earth , in complete humility the y prostrate before that divine spiri t which Is in the form of man .
193 . Notebooks 1923
If you can bring happines s and joy in someone ' s life , If you really think you can please him by being his wife , then do not lose one moment .
194 Notebooks 1926
:
One
gives happiness pleasure .
in order to buy
Dleasure costs haoniness . 136
Cf .)
13 7 VERSION :
ORIGIN : Cf . Sayings I
: "Nirtan" - Bola 8 .
195 . Notebooks
1914/1915
:
Harmony . The best moral is to learn from al l which to us sounds inharmonious tha t we may not use that for the other , and that which sounds harmonious t o
us, to use the same for the others . Thus the ears should be trained .
196 . Notebooks
:
Gamaka . I voice 1) in the heart of my sincer e mureed the word of God . Note 1) : An obsolete form for to speak, to utter , to proclaim . (Oxford Dict .) .
197 . Notebooks
1921
:
Saying . Create heaven or hell, whatever you may, since both are your creations .
Notebooks
:
Alankara . Heaven : These are not raindrops , these are my tears droppin g in sympathy for my hungr y children on earth .
198 .
199 . Notebooks Autumn 1924
: What begins with howling ends i n crying .
200 . Notebooks
1922
: Be good, kind and considerate and be conscious of your husband's honour and of your life's privilege .
201 . Notebooks
Saving . Do not try to force your broad idea s upon the narrow-minded, it is lik e trying put n-~4en- irte-a-nnrrew-erne something large in a small bag, whic h cannot hold . Cf . Sangita I - 59 .
202 . Notebooks
:
To
express
my ideas fully my own words are necessary . when they ar e 137 Cont .)
138 ORIGIN :
Cont .)
VERSION :
interpreted,
they seem clothed in clothes which don't belong to their .
Note : This saying appears in Sangita 1-42 under the heading 'Nasihat' .
203 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying .
Whom I love and adore is my ideal, i t matters not if he is man or God . 204 .
Notebooks :
Monogamy . With the breaking of the ideal whole
life's plan is broken . The downfal l of Napoleon is dated from the day h e deserted his beloved mate . 205 . Notebooks
:
Not only among the monogamo us people ,
but even amo ng the prostitutes whos e life has been with so many men, ar e instances to be found that they have come in the end to monogamy in which
alone they have at last found thei r heart's satisfaction .
206 . Notebooks
:
Sex . Monogamy . When a person has gone from one to two, then he has crossed the barrie r of ideal that kept him intact an d when once he has crossed it, h e would not mind with hcw many he be-
comes intimate . Of course the tie o f marriage obliges him to limit th e
number . 207 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Every impulse is a movement of God directed to accomplish a certai n Purpose which is often beyond human comprehension .
208 . Notebooks
:
Alankara . My infirmity, thou givest weapons a weapon - in the hand of my adver sary and a handle in the hold of my
friend .
138
Gamaka . My fnnits shortcomings become weapon s in the hands of my adversaries and Cont .)
13 9 VERSION ;
ORIGIN : Cont .)
tools
in
the
hands friends .
of
my
loving
209 . Notebooks 1914/1915
: Inharmony is produced by the peculiarity of people's evolution through different grades and directions .
210 . Notebooks 1914/1915 Everyone judges according to one's own interest, that is why the justice of God is right . Divine law and divine justice .
211 . Notebooks 1923
: Jesus came to raise mankind from sin .
212 . Notebooks
:
They
want
to know which is which and what is what and they wish to be reassured that this is this and that is that .
213 . Notebooks 1924
:
One
who
knows truth can be a worse guide than the one who did not know it if he only knew truth not the psychology of human nature .
214 . Notebooks 1924 The knower of the Light cannot be a spiritual guide if he did not know the psychology of human nature . Notebooks 1924
: Bv knowing truth alone one cannot be a teacher, in order to be a teacher one must have the knowledge of human nature . Cf . Sayings I
: "Vadan" - Chala 114 .
215 . Notebooks
:
To
I . we gave the law, to M . we taught its practice, to C . we showed the way and to S . came the realization of truth .
216 . Notebooks 1924
: It must take a certain length of time to be able to gain a person's confidence .
139
140 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
217 . Notebooks 1923
:
Tala . The length of one's heart man shows by his tolerance . The width of one's heart man shows by his endurance . The height of one's heart man shows by his power of understanding . The depth of one's heart man shows by the capacity of assimilating all .
Cf . Savinas I
: "Vadan" - Tala 50 .
218 . Notebooks
:
A hard life often serves to bring out all that is best in man .
219 .
Notebooks 1923 :
Life around us appears passing, whe n in fact we are passing threegk 1) .
Nate 1) : See for complete elaborations and differen t versions : Sayings I : " Vadan" - Tala 23 .
220 . Notebooks
:
Life never dies, it is death whic h is dead . It is death which dies, Cf . Savings I
not life .
: "Vadan" - Sura 15, only the secon d
sentence . 221 . Notebooks
:
Notebooks
1923
Notebooks
:
Gamaka . My life cannot afford to have some one in my i mm ediate surroundings wh o cannot fit in, in the circle of my friends who is indiscreet , among my comrades who is domineering and a s my collaborator who is too cleve r for me .
222 . :
Gamaka . My life feels the strain of bein g held fast by the heavens above and being pulled down by the earth below . My life feels the strain .
223 . Saving . No one gets in life what he doesn' t deserve . 2 ) Note 140
2) : See for elaborations and different versions : Savings I - "Gayan" - Bola 79 .
141 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
224 Notebooks 1922
:
Magazine lecture . Political and social life must go hand in hand , Domestic and educational Religious and theatrical Science and mora l Industry and art Commercial and spiritua l This can produce a new civilization .
225 . . Notebook s
Saying . Those who love to make their life dramatic, turn every situation of life into a romance .
226 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . The wiser you become, the more you realize that you have to (live your (make life amonq fools .
227 . Notebooks
:
While
in life' s endless sea we are sailing toward the goal of our soul's desire we must pass by all that meets us patiently eenrageensly and eentinne always to aspire . Let our heart as compass guide us is the-see and our boat our faith will steer . Day or night through the wind or storm We must (keep near Yaveh •
(row and need not fear . Seer- the- -l ightheese - en-pert- welii-peeeefere- leeg- we-will-reeeh -tke-whereOne who hath seen his life 's purpose as light seen on port from sea eke-dnwr - in-premising - ennrfne Serely He will fulfil his life's missio n 4'rnat - in-hi~n- fer-b1eeeed-is-he Courageously whatever it be . While in life's sea we are sailing toward the goal of our souls' desire We must pass by all that meets us and patiently always aspire . Let our heart as compass guide us and the boat our faith will steer . Day or night through the wind or storm We must row and need not fear .
141
142 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Notebook s
We take with us me mo ries of joy, leaving pains and troubles behind .
In Inayat Khan's handwriting on a loose sheet of paper .
Motherhood . The praise of the beauty in all phases of life is truly due to the Mother, from the spirit to the matter and from the mineral to the human evolution .
Notebooks 192 2
Thy light which riseth in my heart, in the hearts of my mureeds may
228 .
229 .
230 .
shine . The juice that hath made me so drunken, 0 Sagi, give my mureeds that wine . Surround my mureeds with Thy beauty, Create in their lives harmony divine . Give them sympathy for one another Raise them above Life's mine an d thine . Thy light which riseth in my heart, may in the hearts of my mureeds shine . The juice that intoxicated me so , 0 Sagt, give my mureeds that wine . Surround my mureeds with Thy beauty, Create in them Thy harmony Divine, Give them sympathy for one another May they forget world's mine an d
thine . 231 .
Notebook s
Gamaka . I found many who love me and many still more who hate me, but . . . . . Many there are who like me and many more there are who do not like me, but . . . . . I find many who like me and many more who do not like me, but there ar e few who understand me and fewer still who know me well .
232 . Notebooks
As I forward myself so I know my limitation, my King, but as I withdraw myself from the world, so I enter into Thy Kingdom .
Notebooks 192 4
Close your lips and open ears, close ears and open eyes, close eyes an d Cont . )
233 .
142
Cont . )
143
VERSION :
ORIGIN :
open
your
heart .
When you close your lips , your ears will open . When you close your ears, your eyes will open . When you close your eyes, your heart will open , and when your heart is closed to all the outside influence s
your soul will unfold and manifest to your view . 234 . Notebooks 1924
We shall be able to make a living a s your capital will fertilize my labour .
Notebooks
:
No loss is greater than the loss o f one's soul .
Notebooks
:
Love can bring out what is worst an d best in man .
235 .
236 .
237 . Notebooks 1922
:
Saying . Love is nectar as long as it is i n the spiritual spheres, but as i t descends to the material plane, i t turns into poison .
Notebooks 1922
:
Saying . The spiritual love is a nectar, bu t as soon as it is (brought to materia l plane , (mixed with matter , it becomes a sweet wine mixed with a bitter poison .
Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Too much love is like a searing sun .
Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Enviable is he who loveth and asket h for no return . 1 ) (Pitiable is he who loveth not, bu t wanteth love from another . (Pitiable is he who hath no love, bu t seeketh the love from another . Trader is he who loveth and seeketh a response for his love .
238 .
239 .
Cont .)
143
144 ORIGIN : Cont .)
VERSION : Contemptible
is he who seeketh no t and receiveth not love from another .
Note 1) : This sentence was published in Sayings I "Gayan" - Sura 18 .
Notebooks 1921 :
Saying . He is the lover who loves and asks for no return . Trader is he who loves and asks for love in return . Player is he who loves, but changes sides, every season . He who loves and asks for love in return is a trader in love . He who loves, but changes his love every season is a player in love .
240 . In Inayat Khan's handwriting on the fly-leaf of a copy of 'In an Eastern Rosegarden ', presented by him to Lakmd P . van Hogendoro, dated 5th March 1921
Love produces harmony and harmony creates beauty, therefore the chief motto of life is 'Love, harmony and beauty' . Love in all things and beings the beloved God, in harmony with all in the right understanding, and beautify your life, by observing the beauty within and without . By love, harmony and beauty you must turn the whole life into a single vision of Divine glory . May your life, your music, and your soul, be blessed . Inayat Khan 5 March 1921 .
241 . Notebook 19th April - Touch me not I 2) who am such an 12th May 1923 : untrue 2) lover whose . . . . . . 3) is made by artificiality, you might break my vow of chastity . Notes : 2 ) The handwriting of this passage in the Notebooks has become illegible . 3) The word after ' whose' is not well legible, although Sk . read it as 'character' .
242 . Notebooks 1924 I neither believe in nor follow a man, I only worship the formless God, Who is beyond anyone's reach, Whom I myself do not know .
243 . Notebooks 144
:
If
it
has
cost you all you possessed had, to become a real man, it is a bargain .
145 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
244 . Notebooks 1921
:
Heathen
Saying .
If man would have been perfect there would have been no God . 245 . Notebooks 1922
:
It is man who maketh wit-ft his ow n hand an idol which he worshipeth an d then it is the man again who breaket h the idol with his own hands, which h e once had worshipped .
Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Man always expects more than the lif e has to give .
Notebooks 1921
:
Sura . Man himself is the best judge of hi s own doings, no one else can judg e better .
246 .
247 .
248 . Notebooks 1922
:
Saying . Man is the greatest mystery there is .
249 . Notebooks
:
Saying . A man of friendly nature will alway s have friends .
250 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Man rebels, seeing his fellowman i n an enviable position, not recognizing , how hard it is to get, it is harde r still to keen it .
251 . Notebooks
:
AlaDa . Man shows Our nature, but woman signifies Our art . Cf . Sayings I
: "Gayan" - Alapa 5 .
252 . Notebooks 1922
:
Saying . Man who has no (reputation hath n o (character ? feeling for the (reputation of another . (character ?
Cf . Sayings I
: "Gayan" - Chala 45 . 145
146
VERSION :
ORIGIN : 253 . Notebooks
:
Man
who
lives in beauty and progresses through beauty, rises from external beauty to the inner beauty, the beauty of sentiment and virtue .
254 . Notebooks
Sura . The wisest man in the world may do a most foolish thing in an instant . Know by this the imperfection of ma n and trust in the Guidance from above .
Notebooks
Sura .
255 . However greatly man's heart may see m
drawn to the spiritual ideal, th e moment question of money arrives, h e shows himself if his treasure was re siding in heaven or on earth .
256 . Notebooks Autumn 1924
:
Men will always divide themselves in to groups - it is human nature .
257 . Notebooks 1922
Saying . Heathen Manifestation is the grave of God and resurrection is His birth .
:
258 . Notebooks
:
Saving . With its maturity a seeking for Go d is born in the soul, the soul seeks after the truth and wisdom is th e outcome of it .
Notebooks
:
His Message is every Message bet-whe n 4t-eemes -ÂŁ rem-all-1fdee and it i s given by all, but it is in its ful ness, when given by Himself .
259 .
260 . My mind is calm in the thought of God My heart is tranquil in the peace o f God .
Notebooks
251 . Notebooks
1921
146
Saying . Every moment in life is an invaluable opportunity given to make life worth Cont .)
147 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Cont .)
while ; who disregards this has lost his chance ; who considers this has gained . Cf . Sayings II
: Part One under 29th February .
262 .
Notebooks 1922
:
Gamaka . I was born a musician in a musical family and nourished by music was brought up in a musical atmosphere . I lived in music, I loved music and until music began to appear to me as only a miniature expression of the life which is all music . I then sought for the Musician in Whom I found my life's source . It is this pursuit which busied me .
263 . Notebooks
:
Narciss
hath drunk out of Thy cup, Thy glance cast spell on it .
Notebooks
:
Narciss
hath caught a magic spel l since Thy glance did fall upon it . The flame became a haunted moth .
Notebooks
:
It
264 . is
nature which I love, though art I admire .
265 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . The reserved nature gives weight, but makes the personality heavy .
Cf . Savings I : "Gayan" - Bola 150 . Cf . Sayings II : Part Two no . 96 .
266 Notebooks 1923
:
Tana . Ocean, why are you bitter ? I have taken the bowl of poison which the seekers after . . . . . . . 1 )
Note 1) : This saying was found unfinished in Inayat Khan's Notebooks .
267 . Notebooks 1921
:
Sign
of
the
Sufi .
(A tendency to friendship and disinclination to hostility . (Inclined to friendship and disinclined to hostility . Ready to forgive and unwilling to take offence .
147
148 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
268 . Notebooks
:
Pain
with
resignation and with thanksgiving .
pleasure
269 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . HeathenWhen you rise above passion you know what is love , When you rise above love you know what is God , but when you rise above the God ideal then you know yourself .
270 . Notebook s
Forget the past, think not of the morrow, but mind the new present now .
271 . Notebooks
Trouble
not about the past, worry not over the future, but concern yourself with the present, for it is the present which is the picture of the Past and the design for the future .
272 . Notebooks
:
Notebooks
:
If
you
are
rich, people envy you, if you are Poor, they have contempt .
273 Message . Most people want the world Teache r to come as a full moon, being ignorant of the fact that when the moon is full, it begins to decline .
274 . Notebooks
There
are
some oeoole, 3neI-that if they are once allowed to whisper in your ears, they will take liberty too and they will whisper next in your mouth .
275 . Notebooks
148
:
Western
which
is
People have tendency toward doing something which can bring practical result . Fan& or Laya, having no substantial gain, it does not agree with them . To the Eastern the value of nothingness is known, so he goes along this without being sceptical or disappointed, not expecting from his hard work any result but that nothingnes s everything .
149 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Notebooks 192 1
Saying . Towards the One, the Perfection of Love, Harmony and Beauty, the Only Being .
276 .
United with all the illuminated souls, the rays of the Master spirit . One with all the illuminated souls . United with all the illuminated souls, who form the embodiment of the Master, the Spirit of Guidance . Notebook 1921
:
Towards the One, the Perfection of Love, Harmony and Beauty, the Only Being, united with all the illuminated souls who form the embodiment of the Master, the Soirit of Guidance .
277 . Notebook 19th April - Saying . 12th May 1923 : As much good a person is, so much capacity he has to be the contrary .
278 . Notebooks 1921
:
Phy . An intuitive person often makes a mistake, not because he had no intuition, but because he did not listen to it .
Cf . Sayings I
: "Gayan" - Gamaka 11 .
279 . Notebooks 1914/1915 , in Begum's handwriting
: A spiritual person may experienc e the life through senses in the organs of body, still not take a delight in anything material, his joy being centered in spirit . Neither food, drink nor comfort would enslave him, his joy being independent of all .
280 . Notebooks
:
Beautiful
personality is the of the real oroohet .
proof
281 . Notebooks
1921
Saving . Some plants burn by the sun, so some people are spoilt by love .
Notebooks
Saving . The hard times show the holes in human nature .
282 . :
149
150 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Notebooks : Poverty shows holes in human nature . 283 . Notebooks 1914/1915
: Two powers are working through the world, creative and responsive .
284 . Notebooks 192 1
Py . Offering prayer to God is bringing to God consciousness of His perfection .
Notebooks
Your presence gives me exquisite joy and an unearthly passion doth rise in my heart .
285 .
Your presence lifts me up with joy and an unearthly passion does rise in my heart .
I become raised above small things of life and my burden is lightened . My burden lightens and I rise above all things, cares of my life at that moment depart . Your eyes inspire me with trust and confidence and make me drunken with heavenly wine . Thy presence filleth me with joy, and an unearthly passion does rise in my heart . My burden lighteneth, I rise above all things, cares of my life in Thy presence depart . Thine eyes inspire me with trust and confidence and make me drunken with celestial wine . Cf . Sayings I : "Vadan" - Gayatri Pir and Nabi, which may date from the same period .
286 .
Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . The very oresence of the wise answers the problems of life .
287 Notebooks 1921
:
150
My false oride falleth down on earth before thee in prostration in the morn with thy rise, oh sun, I found myself as a twinkling star in th e .midst of the darkness of night, and by Thy mild light, o crescent moon, my vanity quickeneth and I thought I Cont .)
15 1 VERSION :
ORIGIN : Cont .)
was
something , I was somewhere, I was somebody .
288 Notebooks
:
Who
is
the promised one ? It is he who realizes that promise within himself and inspires others with same .
282 . Notebook 19th April 12th May 1923 :
Saying . The purity of the water is in it s
passivity for all dirt that comes t o the sea, it receives 1) without any resistance and sends it down to the bottom 2) but the tank resists it , so it stands on the face of the earth . Resist not evil . Note
1) : Added 'it' by Sk .
2) : After 'the' in Inayat Khan's Notebook onl y a line is still visible where Sk . read 'bottom' .
290 . Saying . Sangatha . Purpose is like a barzakh 3) ; a s with Inayat Khan's explana- barzakh appears before the eyes, s o tion of the word 'barzakh ' . purpose is before mind and as barza k h is in fact not existent, so is pur Notebooks 1921
:
pose in reality . Note 3) : Barzakh : an interval, partition, bar, th e
interval of time , according to the Qur'an, between the deat h of a man and the resurrection ; a picture o f the imagination .
291 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . There is a purpose behind all things .
292 . Notebooks
Saying . There is a purpose for everythin g known or unknown, but beyond thi s
:
ournose there is no purpose and tha t non-purpose is the purpose of all .
293 . Notebook 1914/1915
: The quickening of the heart is the prize of life's pain .
Cf . Sayings II Savings I
: Part One, under 15th August, and . "Gayan" - Bola 157 . 151
152 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
294 . Notebooks 1914/1915
: The reality of the Arif 1) is unrea l to an average person and that whic h is real to him is unreal to the Arif . 1) 'Arif' : Hindustani word for wise, a holy man . As a Sufi term it means gnostic .
295 . Notebooks
1922
:
Raga .
They say I have lost my reason, fo r I seek after the unseen, but Thou ar t manifest to my view by Thy Grace sinc e my sight is keen . 296 .
Notebooks
: Think no further than your reaso n allows you to think , Feel no deeper than your heart ca n bear ,
Say no more than that-whet-+9 -mememtery wise- te-demand what is necessary t o
be said , Act no more once your purpose i s accomplished . 297 .
Notebooks
:
Where
relativity ends,
reality begins .
By rising above relativity, on e
touches reality . Cf . Sayings I
: "Vadan" - Bola 151 .
298 . Notebooks :
Philosophy . The one who becomes wise with rise ,
becomes wiser with fall , but the one who with a rise become s foolish , will become a greater fool with a fall . 299 .
Notebooks
1921 :
Sura . When the rocks are asleep, leaving Us to use them for whatever purpose W e may, when the trees are resigned t o Our will to bear whatever fruit W e
may want them to bear , when the animals are carried alon g with their passions and appetites , We have made you partner in Our domin ion and have given you a share in Ou r mercy, compassion, wisdom and right eousness, that your heart may expan d so that it may rise to Our own per fection . 152
153 VERSION :
ORIGIN : 300 . Notebooks
:
I
am
a
rose
Cf . Savings I
of Thy garden, and o Thou, the seed, the root, the origin, Thou art hidden through the darkness of night .
: " Gayan" - Raga 22 .
301 . Notebooks
0
rosebud,
why have around you ?
you
so
many
thorns
To test my lover . 302 . Notebook 19th Aoril - Tana . 12th May 1923 : Roseplant, from where do you get your flowers and thorns ? Flowers I inherit from the heaven and thorns from the earth .
303 . Notebooks
:
Loving
ones
Notebooks
:
Sea-green,
must make sacrifices, and loveless must submit to their Punishment .
304 . what do you signify ? I am the same thing in the water as the jealousy in the human heart . Tana . Sea-green, what do you signify ? The confusion of the brain of the sea .
305 . Notebook 19th April - Verna . 12th May 1923 : The sea
: What do you bring me that swings my soul with joy? The new moon : Good tidings .
306 . Notebooks
:
Verna . Sea to the morning breeze : What does thy gentle kiss mean express? Good morning . What have you come to tell me ? Rise before the sunrise .
307 .
Notebooks
Verna . The sea
: What doest thou bring me that giveth me such ecstasy? The morning breeze : The breath o f life . 153
154 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
308 .
Notebook 19th April - Verna . 12th May 1923 : The sea
: What does make you sweet and me bitter ? River : My devotion and your conceit .
309 . Notebooks : In the search of truth all one has lost is not really lost, only it has cost . 31 0 Notebooks 1914/1915 :
For the seer of the light the dark is a dark and for the waker in the dark the light is dark just like the sun blind .
311
Notebooks :
Bola . Being by oneself is being one 's self .
312
Notebooks 1923 :
W
1)
Gamaka . My self is higher than every claim that can be made, therefore I-clai m
te-be-neth+ng I make no claim . Note 1) : W probably stands for "Wadan" (= Vadan) . 313 .
Notebooks 1921
: When I look at Thee I fly heaven wards, when I look at my little sel f I drop down . When Thou art before my vision I fly , my burden becometh light, but as I
see my little self I drop down an d upon me falleth all the load of th e earth .
314 . Notebooks
:
Chala . By controlling one's sentiments on e becomes a reservoir of power . By controlling your sentiments yo u become a reservoir of power .
315 . Notebooks, 1924 :
154
probably A service without wages, love withou t reciprocity, merit without gift , beauty without appreciation .
155 VERSION :
ORIGIN :
316 . Notebooks 1922 :
Saying . It is your physical shadow reflected in the heart of another which becomes doubt .
Cf . Sayings I
: "Gayan " - Chala 140 .
317 . Notebooks 1924
:
He who is ready to observe the funny side of things, who is ready inclined to sympathize with the sorrowful, who is inclined to admire beauty in all its expressions , who is inclined to observe all that is deep and subtle is indeed an awakened soul .
Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . The one who agrees the most, sees all sides of the question , and the one who disagrees , sees but one side .
Notebooks 1923
:
Chala . Sin is something which does not cope with one's life and character, its effect on life is like the effect of some food one has eaten which one cannot digest .
318 .
319 .
320 . Notebooks
Saying . Looking at the sinful makes the sin embarrassed , when the sinner looks at his sin , he becomes ashamed of himself .
:
321 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying .
Every situation of life is a preparation for some purpose . Note :
See Sayings I
: "Gayan" - Bola 128 .
322 . Notebooks 1921
:
Notebooks 1921
:
Situations are involved under circumstances .
323 . Raga . The song of Thy glory so many singers have sung in all ages , and yet it is never finished . 155
156 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Notebooks 1921
Saying . Sorrow tunes a person to a higher pitch .
324
325 . Notebooks
:
Every
soul
Cf . Sayings I
is to be illuminated by My spirit . Every heart is open to My call . Every soul awaits My glance . : "Vadan" - Alaoa 6 .
326 . Notebooks 192 1
Phy . The soul is linked directly with all that concerns it and its reflection falling upon all it concerns directs affairs of life accordingly .
Notebooks
:
Speech of a sage is inspiring, but his silence illuminates souls .
Notebooks
:
327
328 . My
lionlike spirit has in prison bars ,
been
closed
(My soul is soaring, holding a beg(My soaring soul is holding gar's bowl in hand . 329 Notebooks
:
The
Notebooks
:
There
spirit
of discontentment will never be satisfied, but will demand more and more setisÂŁeetien ; if-pea offered-it-et-e}}7, even if you gave it all that is in the earth and in the heaven .
330 . are
seven steps to the staircase of Love : 1 . passion, 2 . affection, 3 . admiration, 4 . adoration, 5 . devotion, 6 . service and 7 . sacrifice . 1 . attraction, 2 . control, 3 . support, 4 . use, 5 . govern, 6 . raise, 7 . renunciation . 1 . observe, 2 . penetrate, 3 . analyze, 4,. conceive, 5 . distinguish, 6 . express, 7 . synthesize .
156
1 . observation, 2 . penetration, 3 . perception, 4 . conception, S . analyCont .)
157 VERSION :
ORIGIN : Cont .)
sation, 6 . assimilation, 7 . synthesisation .
331 . Let your strength be the truth .
Notebook s
force of
332 . Notebooks 1921
Phy . When the strongminded takes counsel of the weakwilled and when the wise listens 1) the advice of the foolish, then affairs go wrong .
:
Note 1) : 'To listen' without preoosition : see Oxford Dictionary .
333 . Notebooks
:
Saying . Study begins in observation in examination .
334 . Notebooks
1• 2. 3.
and ends
Seek -the-truth7- net-seeeeaa Seek not success, but truth . Trust even your worst enemy . Forget the past ; give uo the thought for the morrow, only mak e
the best of . . . . . 4 . 5 . 6 . 7. 8. 9 . 10 . Note 2 ) :
Work for the work, not for success . Value the nobility of the soul mere -then- meney most of all things . Respect every soul, worthy or unworthy . Don't forgive yourself for not forgiving the others . Consider no loss greater than losing one's soul . Arrest every impulse and examine before it is expressed . If you believe in no God, worship beauty nature .
an ope n space in the Notebook .
335 Notebooks, orobably A Sufi must always recognize in God 1924 : the source of all things and th e origin of all beings .
336 . Notebooks, probably A Sufi must observe in the continual 1924 : unfoldment of the spirit the birth of the soul . 157
158 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
337 . Notebooks
:
Verna . The rising sun
: What offering do yo u
bring me ? The roses
: Our tears .
338 . Notebooks 1914/1915, in Begum's handwriting
:
Sun is formed by the grouping of vi brations of Noor, the light, and moo n
the shadow of the sun . The planetary system is formed of the limite d groupings of the vibrations of sun' s light by its activity and the worl d is the result on the surface of th e activity of the sun . The colours are the illusions which take place during a certain replace -
ment of the vibrations appearing to our sight under the influence of tim e and space . 338A . Notebooks 1914/1915, in Begum's handwriting .
The human race at each step of evolution added a special beauty until i t arrived from animal likeness to a
beautiful human structure and the n here a time comes that the store an d
stock of the most beautiful forms and merits should thus be sacrificed t o
the machines . Had it been better i f the war would have come a little late r when the machinery would have bee n perfected enough to fight together i n the place of man with his brave an d beautiful heart .
339 . Notebooks 1914/1915, in Begum's handwriting .
The The The The
sweet eater wants attentio n sour eater wants argumen t salt eater wants beaut y pepper eater wants . . . . . . . 1 )
Note 1) : an open space in the Notebook .
340 . Notebooks
:
Saying . The teacher creates appetite in th e ounil for the knowledge which canno t be taught .
341 . Notebooks 1923
158
:
Message . The great teachers have been th e .examples for souls bound to perfection .
159 VERSION :
ORIGIN : 342 . Notebooks
:
Gamaka . Every thing in life that strikes against my heart acts like turning of a switch that puts the light on . Cf . Sayings I
: "Vadan" - Gamaka 6 .
343 . Notebooks
:
There is one thing which has no answer and that is : " Why" .
Notebooks
:
Why, - I have no answer for thee . Why, - Thy self art the cover over the answer . Why, - Thou art an appetite which in the morning is fed ; in the eve asks for food .
Notebooks
:
Tana . Match-stick , what did you say when I struck thee ? Why? Cf . Sayings I
: "Gayan" - Tana 21 .
344 . Saying . All things lead to some good .
Notebooks
345 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying .
All things that make man long for them, deprive him of his freedom .
346 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . It is easy to believe and it is easier still to disbelieve without troubling to know about the things .
347 . Notebooks
:
There
is
nothing which is wrong, wreng is-ettty-that -whiePt- le- net- in- its-plnee things seem to-be wrong when not in their proper Place .
Cf . Sayings I
: "Vadan" - Tala 46 .
348 . Notebooks
1921
:
Saying . Things you would never like to do, circumstances comr3el you to do .
159
160 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
349 .
Notebooks 1921
:
Philosophy . Three things of the Bible are less understood by the generality : the self-denial, the vain repetition, and the sacrament .
350 . Notebooks
:
Saying . To talk about inner things to an unmatured soul is like singing romance to a babe in the cradle instead of lullaby .
351 . Notebooks 1921
:
A typewritten copy of Sangatha 1-12 .
Phy . While holding things you are held by them, but as you lose your hold on them so they will be attracted to you as steel to the magnet . Tassawuf . When holding things you are held by them ; as - - - - - - - - - - etc . t e as sris attracted to a magnet .
352 . Notebooks
Prayer . I am friendless among friends and I am lost on finding Thee . My life's safety is in clinging fast to Thy rope and when I let it loose my life is in danger . I am fearless in Thy thought when I took to this in all times .
353 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . A thousand worldly clever people cannot make one real wise man .
Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Even the trees cover under their leaves and branches what must be covered and when man boldly brings out his infirmities and is proud over them, certainly his soul has not come to life vet .
Notebooks 1921
:
Saving . Going after truth considering it false is worse than going after falsehood .
354 .
355 .
160
Cont .)
16 1 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Cont . )
Going after truth thinking it might be false is worse than treading the path of falsehood .
Notebook s
Truth is my backbone, Love is my heart , Imagination is the wings I have, and on the legs of reason I stand, Duty is my hand ,
356 .
Life is my voice and my word is God .
357 . When truth is not recognized by the people, falsehood takes its chance .
Notebooks
358 . Notebooks 1924
: Roseflower, why do you open your mouth? To tell you of my glorious . past . Cf . Savings r
: "Vadan" - Tana 9 .
359 . Notebooks 1924 :
Roseflower , what are you saying with your lips open ? I am speaking of my glorious cast .
Cf . Savings I
: "Vadan" - Tana 9 .
360 . Notebooks
Tulin,
where is your reserve gone ? My reserve has passed with the moments of vanity and I am left here .
Cf . Sayings I
360A . Notebooks
: "Gayan" - Tana 5 .
It is most essential to distinguis h between want and need .
: Cf . Sayings
I
: "Vadan " - Chala 10 .
361 . Saying . The uncovering of the error is discovering of the path .
Notebooks
362 . Notebooks 1914/1915
:
The universe is formed by the five elements which alone sustain it and in the same it is absorbed . 161
162 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
a) Notebooks 1921
W . of P .M .
363 .
The general unrest in the world a t the present moment is an outcome o f wrong mentality and the only way ou t of it is the changing of the attitud e of mind from wrong to right . W ords of P ir-o- M urshi d The general unrest in the world a t
b) Copied by Gd .
the present moment is an outcome o f wrong mentality,_ and the only way ou t
of it is the changing of the attitud e of mind from wrong to right .
364 .
Tal a Who has once sinned is a venturer , who has twice sinned is an explorer ,
Notebooks, probably 1924
but who has thrice sinned is a sinner . 365 . Notebooks
:
There are many ways which lead to
illusion, but there is one way tha t leads to truth .
366 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying . Do not put your weight on others un -
necessarily, for they, in their turn , will throw you down and tread upo n you . Cf . Sangita 1-8 .
367 . Notebooks 1921
:
Amusing idea .
In the West feet do not exist , they are buried in the boots .
368 . Notebook 19th April 12th May 1923 :
How charming is your gentle whisper ing, o morning breeze, it thrills my heart, vibrating through my whol e
being . It is the glad tidings I bring you ,
the sun will soon rise . 369 . Notebooks 1921
:
Saying .
The wise is more ready to believ e than the foolish one .
370 . Notebooks
162
:
Every-wend-gives-rise-to-a-geestten: Words raise argument as dust raised by the wind, . but as the water keep s Cont .)
163 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Cont . )
dust down , so is the power of silence upon the restless mind .
371 . Notebooks 1921
Question :
:
Please tell me what are you, what is your work , and what is your aim ? I am what I know myself to be, and also I am what you think I .am, my work is whatever I do and my aim is to be what I must be . 372 . Question : Please tell me what you are ?
Notebooks 1921
I have three aspects to my being : First I am what I am ,
Second I am what I know myself to be, Third I am what you take me to be . Please explain all three aspects you just mentioned in detail . The first aspect of my being is beyond significance ,
The second aspect can be only in my knowledge , and the third aspect you already know .
373 . Notebooks
:
Tana . Workman, you were sleeping, I suppose? No, I was sawing wood .
Note : 'To saw wood' (fig .) means : to work while others deliberate (U .S .slang, 1909) . See Oxford Dictionary .
374 . Notebooks 1914/1915, in Begum's handwritin g
Bad you be you are cruel to the world, Good you become you crush yourself . Therefore Sufi forms his principle according to the standard of the world's evolution according to the trend of the thought of the lan d in order to serve his environments and surroundings in whichever way he may bring peace . Therefore his inner life is different from the outer which he calls mysticism .
375 . Notebooks 1921
Phy . If you are displeased with yoursel f Cont .)
163
164 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Cont .)
then the whole world is displeased , even God is displeased with you, bu t if you are satisfied with yourself , then what else do you need ?
In Inayat Khan's handwriting, found together with sayings copied by Mt ., and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Gamak' .
Gamaka . There is nothing in the world that I specially care for, though everythin g in life interests me .
Notebooks
Gamaka .
376 .
377 . :
There is nothing in the world whic h I cannot do, but many things ther e are which I must not do . 378 . Notebooks
:
The world is large, but I am large r still .
379 . Notebooks 1921
:
Phy . The world within you is reflected i n the world without and it is the actio n and reaction between the two world s that makes your life .
380 . Notebooks
Saving . It is better not to be than be in th e wrong .
381 . Notebooks 1922
:
Message . To be so fine as to keep tuned to tha t high pitch that He may at any momen t
find His lute ready to strike and a t the same time to be as strong as th e steel to endure the constant wea r and tear of this earthly life . It i s to be in heaven and at the same tim e
on earth, which is beyond the power o f every man except the one with th e supernatural power who beareth th e Message from above and walketh o n this earth . He walketh on the thorny path barefooted, over doubts, suspi cions, criticisms, oppositions, treach -
ery, deceit and all evil s (of the human nature . (the human nature breeds . 164
Cont .) .
165 VERSION :
ORIGIN :
Cont .) He fighteth every fear, risketh every danger of life and yet unshaken in his faith and with unbroken courage, with closed eyes and open heart, he passeth unimaginable distances, on the land, in the water, through the air toward the sky . He who is seen by all and yet not seen, known to all and yet unknown, living amidst all and yet .far away, speaketh to all and yet perfectly silent, walketh most gently and humbly on the earth, such is the being of the Messenger . To the eyes of men he is a man and in the being of God he is God . Most attached and yet detached, most interested and yet indifferent, sad and yet most joyful, rich and yet so poor, comrade of the old and friend of the ehildren young, Master of both the worlds and yet the servant of all . Himself a beautiful personality, yet a worshipper of beauty, Himself the singer of heavenly lore and yet a great lover of song, Himself a prophet, yet enjoying all poetry, the Messenger is born of beauty, he lives in beauty, he spreads beauty all over and yet the same he must renounce . Note : Although parts of these words appear in different compilations (Pamphlet 'The Message', 1922 and the book 'The Unity of Religious Ideals') the whole of them was not found elsewhere in the archives to-date .
382 Notebook 1914/1915
: A Western person does a thing at his immediate desire, he never waits to dream .
Notebook 1914/1915
: The western person does not allow himself to render an undue help specially to a stranger, nor he axoects the same from a stranger . Surrender self to stranger .
383 .
384 . Notebook 1914/1915
Saying . He who speaks bad of any one, he knows him but a little, and he who speaks good of any one, he undoubtedly knows him better, but he who knows . and says nothing about any one, knows him the best, for he is the knower .
165
166 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
385 .
Notebook 1914/1915 : The reward for man's virtue and punishment for his sin is first produced within his own mind, which in his life time is his courage or fear and heaven and hell after death . 386 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
If a spiritual person tries to tak e another person on the path of th e ditch digger, he cannot be succesfu l in it for he has a torch in his hand ; it shows the person the ditch or pi t before coming to it ; but (if) a person whose soul is darkened can caus e another to fall in a pit in one moment's time for he carries darknes s with him, which overwhelms everybod y that comes in his contact . Cf . Sayings II : Part Two nrs . 84 and 85 .
387 . Notebook 1914/1915 :
In all ages woman has been considere d as the ideal figure of beauty, thoug h the sight of man and woman both to gether forms the most perfect pictur e of all creation .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
Love is the fire that burns all infirmities .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
Hurting with harsh words is wors e
388 .
389 . than hitting with hard stone . 390 .
Notebook 1914/1915 :
An immoral person is preferable to the illmannered one .
Notebook 1914/1915
You cannot admire a beautiful perso n
391 . :
with ugly personality . 392 . Notebook 1914/1915
Do not imagine what you do not wis h to happen .
Notebook 1914/1915 :
Do not say what you do not wish to be done .
393 .
166
16 7 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
394 . Notebook 1914/1915 A donkey is more useful than an ass among men .
395 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Trying to make a fool understand i s as knocking one's head against a wall .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
Look for the satan in the crowd an d search for God in the solitude .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
City is the home of the satan an d wilderness is the abode of God .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
Sex .
396 .
397 .
398 . There is nothing after which man goe s as blindly as after a woman . Adam would have easily left heaven fo r earth if Eva had only desired of him .
399 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Sex .
It is the goodness of woman tha t makes man pray upon her and it i s
the tyranny of woman that makes ma n love .
400 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Sex . Poligamy . The progress of man and woman i n
different lines and in differen t speeds bring difference in the marrie d couples . 401 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Sex .
How inconsiderate it is of man wh o does not recognize any woman body a s
sacred as the womb of his mother .
402 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Notebook 1914/1915
:
Sex . To a person with changeable nature , monogamy as a principle would become nothing but an imprisonment .
403 . Sex . Courtship . What respect that man has who cannot 167 Cont .)
168 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Cont .)
respect a woman .
404 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Saying .
She is a precious pearl that forms in the shell of heart and is found in the soil of the spirit, and that is sincerity . Cf . Sayings I
: "Gayan" - Bola 40 .
Cf . Sayings II : Part One "The Bowl of Saki", 28th January .
405 . Notebook 1914/1915
: No ideal proves to be ideal in the end because it is not the creation of your own mind .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
406 . Saying . Good manner is much more becomin g
than good dress . 407 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
The treasure of virtue is an im -
perishable treasure . 408 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Misti . 1) .
The nature of the trees to sprea d their branches and the forms o f animals, birds and especially o f man, all shows a light with its ray s spread around ; it is therefore sta r is the symbol of the form of man . Note 1) :
Hindustani word for drunkenness, intoxi -
cation, lust . In Persian poetry it is used to conve y that the (Divine) beloved does not pa y
heed to the lover . 409 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Saying . Looking down in shame for one's faul t
The brackets were put by is as kissing the feet (of the on e Inayat Khan . offended) with one's eyes . 410 . Notebook 1914/1915 There is no better penalty (for one' s The brackets were out by fault) than repentance .
Inayat Khan . 168
169 VERSION :
ORIGIN : 411 . Notebook 1914/1915
: Greeting one with a happy smile is as presenting one with most beautiful flowers .
Notebook 1914/1915
: Power wants the eyes of justice .
412 .
413 . Notebook 1914/1915 Be generous with your own but considerate with the property of another .
414 . Notebook 1914/1915
: Be forward in giving but backward in taking things from another .
Notebook 1914/1915
: The heart of man is the shrine of God ; take care when you touch it lest you may hurt the Unseen Dweller within .
Notebook
1914/1915
:
Notebook
1914/1915
Notebook
1914/1915
415 .
416 . He who speaks things, he himsel f knows all, who listens knows but a little but the third person know s nothing .
417 . Justice is done by law and the la w is made by man whose life is base d on looking for his own interest .
418 . :
Selfdenial is the first step t o saintliness .
419 . Notebook 1914/1915 The brackets were put by Inayat Khan .
Life is a (playground) stage to th e thoughtless and a school to th e thinker .
Notebook
1914/1915
who receives an honour is honoure d and who refuses it is above the honour .
Notebook
1914/1915
Saying . It is a blow that awakens from sleep , Cont .) 169
420 .
421 .
170 ORIGIN :
VERSION :
Cont .)
not a caress .
422 . .Notebook 1914/1915
:
Saying .
An action forced by a principle is not necessarily a virtue . 423 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Saying . Do not turn any one against anybody for you may teach him some day t o turn against you .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
Teach yourself to suit the world in-
424 . stead of trying to make the worl d suit you, which can never be done .
425 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
He who pities himself and looks fo r
sympathy from others has failed an d he who forgets himself sympathizin g with others is the one whose lif e
is a success . 426 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Saying . With things unchangeable, situation s unalterable and people firm in thei r habit, you can do nothing but to pu t up with .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
You can break rocks, cut the woo d and melt metal, you can direct animal s and birds, but with man who does no t learn, you cannot do anything .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
Notebook 1914/1915
: World becomes bitter, life becomes hard and mind becomes weary, when misfortune overtakes man .
427 .
428 . Saying . Life provides you with a substitute for all you have lost .
429 .
430 . Notebook 1914/1915 : Thoughts are the fruits of the seed 170 man sows in his mind .
17 1 VERSION :
ORIGIN : 431 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Saying . The more I know, the more I realize how little I know .
Notebook 1914/1915
: Why worry about another's fault, his fault itself is his own enemy .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
432 .
433 . Saying .
Honour sold for money and soul sol d for honour, in all the cases th e seller is at a loss .
434 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
If your friend does not see from your point of view, do not argue, kee p quiet, he will perhaps not understan d
you just now .
435 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Saying . Work for the sake of reward is a labourwork but work done for the sak e of work is a piece of art .
Notebook 1914/1915
:
The tail of the scorpion has poiso n
436 . and poison is in the teeth of th e snake, poison is in the tongue of ma n who hurts another by his harsh wor d but he who is bittered against anothe r has a poison in his heart .
437 . Notebook 1914/1915
:
Saying . The rich in the kingdom of God pit y him whose kingdom passes away .
Notebook 1914/1915
: Sound is the sign of life in the temples of Gods and Goddesses in Hindu churches . . . . . 1) bells ringing show life even in the silence . 2 )
438 .
Notes : 1) may be an open space in the Notebook or an illegible part of the sentence . 2) the last four words are not clearly legible .
439 . Notebook
1914 /1915
:
Saying . Cont .)
171
172 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont .)
Love is without a head ,
beauty is without a heart . 440 .
Notebook 1914/1915 :
Pain is as water to the plant of love .
441 . a) MS . Sk ., dated Summer 1922 .
In shorthand ; the first two sentences were written in longhand .
Error is made by a wrong aim . Every activity is as hitting at
a
target, when a man has not hit i t rightly it is gone astray . Personally I consider to err no t only natural but interesting . I think the persons who do not make a n error will not do right also ; he i s
not capable of either . Who does no t ride will not fall also off the horse . It is the rider who will have a chance of falling . It is the perso n who is courageous himself to act, wh o will b) Copied by Sk . from her shorthand .
.
.
.
.
.
Error is made by a wrong aim . Every activity is a hitting at a target; when one has not hit i t
rightly it is gone astray . Personally I consider to err no t only naturalL but interesting . I think the person(s?) who do not make an error will not do right also ; he i s
not capable of either . Who does no t ride will not fall also off the horse . It is the rider who will have the
chance of falling .
442 . Copied by Gd . from (?) .
In absence of success, vanity find s support in failure . A donkey, bein g accustomed to whips, cannot feel th e joy of being patted .
MS . Gr ., together with other sayings, mostly meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
There are three paths : path o f saintliness - of mastery - and th e prophetic path . in the path of saintliness continua l resignation is necessary . In the path of mastery ccnstan t struggle is required . In the proohetic path resignation t o the past and struggle for the futur e
443 .
is necessary . 172
Cont .)
17 3 ORIGIN and elaborations : Cont .)
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Saying . There are three possible attitudes towards evil impressions . 1 . In the path of saintliness one must consider it to be Karma and therefore be resigned to it . 2 . In the path of mastery think it to be the evil force and fight against it . 3 . In the prophetic path that which has happened think it was from Karma - and•what will happen think that you will struggle against it .
Cf . Part 2, no .620 .
a) Some sentences in the For the love is the plant of God . It lecture 'Psychology - needs no water to grow . It is life Attraction and Repulsion' itself . It has power in itself to of 24th August 1925, grow and expand . reported by Sk . Sk .'s shorthand reads : b) Sk .'s transcription of For love - - - - - - - - God ; i t her shorthand at a - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - later date . itself, i t has - - - - - - - - - - . c) A typewritten version, _ Love is - - - - - - - - -Gods it found together with - to make it growl itother sayings under the - it has the power within heading 'Written down self - - - - - - - - - - - - . by memory during th e Summer School 1925' .
a) A sentence in the lec- The godly is not always the selfture 'Mysticism' of 4th realized one . But the self-realized September 1925, reported one is godly . by Sk . Sk .'s shorthand reads : b) Sk .'s transcription of - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - her shorthand at a - - - - -one ; but - - - - - - etc . later date . C)
A typewritten version, The godly is not always self found together with realised .. - but the self realised other sayings under the _ is always godly . heading 'Written down by memory during the Summer School 1925' .
a) A sentence in the lec- Then the man becomes God-man, Godture 'Mysticism' - 'The conscious . Outwardly he is in the Path to God' of 10th universe, inwardly the universe is July 1925, reported by in him . Outwardly he is smaller than Sk . a drop, (inwardly) he is larger than Sk .'s shorthand and her the ocean . Cont .) 173
174 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont .) transcription of it ; in the latter the brackets were omitted . b) A typewritten version, found together with other sayings under the heading 'Written down by memory during the Summer School 1925' .
The God conscious man seems to be in the universe, in reality the universe is in Him . He seems to be smaller than a drop . in reality he is larger than the ocean .
447 . a) A sentence in the lecSacrifice begins renunciation but it ture 'Mysticism - When is the point of perfection which may considering virtue . . . be called renunciation . of 7th August 1925, reported by Sk . and published in the book 'Philosophy, Psychology, Mysticism', year not known . Sk .'s shorthand and her transcription of it : b) A typewritten version, found together with other sayings under the heading 'Written down by memory during the Summer School 1925' .
Sacrifice is a preparation for renunciation .
a) Some sentences in the lecture 'It is the spirit of all souls . (= Religious Gatheka 2), Summer 1922, reported by Sk . Sk .'s shorthand and her transcription of it :
The belief in God is natural ; but in life art and nature both are necessary . So God, Who exists indeoendent of us making Him, must be made by us for our own comprehension .
448
b) Copied by Gd . as 'Gatheka No . 2', to which in Sk .'s handwriting was added 'Religious' . Two alterations made by Gd . in her copied text .
c) Copied by Gd . with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -life both art and nature are necessary . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - of our making Him, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Belief - - - - - - - - - etc .
44 9 a) MS . Gd ., dated October 14th, 1917, 5 a .m . 174
Alapa . We have opened the book of life before thy sight and have taught the e Cont . a)
17 5 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) The word 'Alapa' was added later on .
from it the lesson . Is it a small boo n for all thy pains? This book of lif e is open to all but known to few . Al -
most all turn the pages of this boo k day and night and yet every page i n it is as a blank paper to them . There are many who can read this book lik e a parrot and cannot understand th e meaning, but there are some blesse d ones who turn the pages of this boo k bearing the divine torch in the hand .
They alone can see into it clearl y and read it properly and can under stand Our teaching thoroughly .
b) A typewritten copy with five Alapas under the
Wadan . Alapa .
heading "Wadan" . (Gd .'s
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
bookpreparation for the
- - - - - - - - - - - - taught thee ,
"Vadan" .)
from it,, the - - - - - - - - etc .
- - - - to all , but - - - - -etc . - - and nights and - - - - - etc . - - - - - - - - - - - - -book .- lik e a parrots and yet cannot understan d the meaning. B ut there - - - etc .
- - - - - - - - - -torch in hand . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -etc . 450 a) MS . Gd ., dated October 11th, 1917, 10 p .m . The word 'Alaoa' was added later on .
b) A typewritten copy with five Alapas under the heading " Wadan " . ( Gd .'s bookpreparation for the "Vadan" .)
Alaoa . We have disclosed the hearts of people before thee, that thou mayest distinguish between false and true . It is not that thou mayest become indifferent to people, but that thou mayest become independent in the trust of thy Lord .
Wadan . A apa . - - - - - - - - - - - -
451 a) MS . Gd ., dated October Alaoa . 11th, 1917, 10 p .m ., The universe is like unto a harp in second part of the pre- Our hands and all in the universe are vious sentences . as its strings . Their high and low works therein are as the notes We strike upon Our harp . When We are pleased We can favour through thy enem#es adversaries, when We are displeased We can disfavour through thy friends . All thy pain and pleasure is absolutely in Our hands . It is thy mistake that thou attributest the good and bad done unto thee to th e Cont .
a)
175
176 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a)
others, who are nothing but Our in struments tools to work . As tho u
prayest thou just as well mayest se e with open eyes Our might and Ou r works . b) A typewritten copy with five Alapas under the heading "Wadan" . (Gd .'s bookpreparation for the "Vadan" .)
Wadan . Alapa . The universe is like un•_o a harp i n Our hands ., and all in this universe ar e as its strings . Their high and low
works therein are as the notes W e strike upon Our harp . When We ar e pleased We can favour through thine adversaries, when We are dis pleased We can disfavour through th y friends . All thy pain and pleasure i s absolutely in Our hands . It is thy mistake that thou attributes th e good and bad done unto thee to th e others, who are nothing but Ou r tools to work with . As tho u
prayest, thou mayest just as well se e with open eyes Our might and Ou r works .
45 2 a) MS . Gd ., dated October Alapa . 12th, 1917, 6 a .m . To those whom We wish to torment We can torture their life even when the y The word 'Alaoa' was are in the midst of all environment s added later on . of comfort and happiness and thos e
whom We wish to make happy, in the m We send-Aar-penee open Our fountai n of peace even if they are surrounde d
by the all miseries and discomforts . Do not look therefore to the seemin g source of comfort and to the apparan t
means of happiness with a view t o attain peace . Let not the miserie s frighten thee nor let discomfort s make thee disheartened . Look at Us . It is Our smile which brings 1 ) and it is Our glance of wrath 2 ) all the torture there is . We may tur n the whole world for one into heaven . We may change in a moment's tim e heaven into hell . He who cannot se e Us he is not living, he is dead, an d to him We are as dead ; and he who ca n see Us, he is living and to him W e are alive . Notes 1) and b) A typewritten copy with five Alapas under the heading "Wadan" . (Gd .'s bookpreoaration of the
"Vadan" . ) 176
2) : an open space in the MS . Wadan . Alapa . Those - - - - - - to torment-, We can torture their lives even - - - -
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Cont . b)
177 ORIGIN and elaboration : Cont .
b)
-
-
-
-
-
DIFFERENT VERSIONS : -
- happinessl and - - etc . - - - - - - - - - - -Our fountai n of peace, even - - - - - - - - - etc . Do not look, therefore, to - - - etc . - - - - - - - - - - - -We may turn the whole world for one into Heaven, We may change in a moment's time Heaven into Hell . He who cannot see Usl he is not living , he is dead, and - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -etc .
453 . a) MS . Gd ., dated October 14th, 1917, 10 p .m . The word 'Alapa' was added later on .
Alapa . We have laid bare thy ideals before thee, that thou mayest for thyself see what is in them that is worth your while . Nothing is-the - answer except Our being in everything which is the only ideal there is . Therefore depend not upon any one save Us . We alone are your protector, your sustainer, your helper and your saviour . Have trust in Us, have faith in Us, depend only upon Us, and look upo n Us for all things thou desirest . Verily all that the earth possesseth and all that the heavens contain is absolutely in the mighty hand of thy Lord, the all powerful, supreme, King of the whole being .
b) A typewritten copy with five Alapas under the heading "Wadan " . ( Gd .'s bookpreparation of the "Vadan" .)
Wadan .
a) Copied by Gd . from (?)
Message . The claimant of Christhood living on earth must surely be searched by numberless searchlights constantly falling upon him . Men can only see the limitations of his human life and can never fethem probe the hights of his dinivity, except some few whe-are whose number is comparatively small in-number . b) 177
We have laid bare thine ideals - etc . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -worth thy while . Nothing except Our B eing in everything, which - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -etc . - - - are thy protector, thy sustainer, thy helper and thy saviour . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -look t o Us - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . - - all that the Heavens - - - - etc . - - - - - - - - - - - - supreme Kinq - - - - - - - - -
454 .
178 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) A typewritten copy, found with Gd .'s bookpreparation of 'The Unity of Religious Ideals', Chapter 'The Messenger ', together with some other sayings under the heading The Message' .
The Message . The claimant of Christhoodl living on earth- - - - - - - - - - - - etc . - - --- - - - - - - Men can see only the - - - - - - - - - - - - - -etc . - - - - - except some, who are few - comparatively,- _ in number .
c) Another typewritten copy (Gd .'s bookpreparation of the "Vadan" . )
Wadan . Bela Chala .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -etc . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -ar e few_ comparatively_ in number .
455 . Copied by Gd . from one of Inayat Khan's lectures, together with other sentences meant for publication in the "Vadan", under the heading 'Sayings (to be read to Pir-o-Murshid)' .
Chala . It is for our convenience that we say "thing" and "being" ; in reality there are no things, they are all beings .
456 . a) A sentence in the lecture 'Concentration' (Gatha Series II no . 2, 'Everyday Life') of 28th July 1922, in Miss R . Jones's handwriting .
All faculties in man become invaluable when a person is able to use them at will .
b) Copied by Gd . 'from Gathas' and meant for publication in the "Gayan" . In Mc . 's handwriting 'valuable' was written over 'invaluable' .
All faculties _ become invaluable when - - - - - - - -
.
457 . a) A sentence in the lecThe fatalist makes human beings as chairs and tables, the mystic makes ture 'The Message' (Religious Gatheka 20) of even chairs and tables living beings . 10th March 1921, reported by Mrs . Iris Reelfs . b) Copied by Gd .
458 a) A sentence in the lecture 'It is the spirit of all souls . . .' (Religious Gatheka 2), Summer 1922, reported by ., 178 Sk
God cannot be two - God of each is God of all - but in order to comprehend that God we each have to make our own God . Cont . a)
179 ORIGIN
and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) Sk .'s shorthand and her transcription of it . b) Copied by Gd . and meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
God cannot be two ; the God of each is the God of all, but - - - - etc .
a) MS . Gd .
Gamaka . The more pendent I have become the more I have suffered, owing to the indiscretion of people .
b) A typewritten copy with sayings meant for publication in the "Vadan" . (Gd .'s bookpreparation) .
Gamaka . The more independent - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - to people's indiscretion .
459 .
460 . The last sentence of The key of the mind lays in God 'Questions and Answers' realization . after the lecture 'Metaphysics' of 10th July 1923, in Sr .'s handwriting .
461 The beginning of the lecture 'Art', Summer 1921, reported by Sr . (Sr . and Sd . van Tuyll had it painted on the top of the walls of Sd .'s studio, 78 Anna Paulownastraat, The Hague, Holland) .
Life is as the movement of lines . The beauty of lines is the wisdom and the beauty of life . Who understands lines, understands God's plan . The colour is a later creation than the line . The colour is the fulfilment of the line . The line is God's power ( mind), the colour His softness ( mercy, wisdom), the light is his everduring life .
A separate sentence or may be an answer to a question, dictated by Inayat Khan to Sr . together with the lecture 'Art', Summer 1921 .
Symbology means to understand every form, every colour, every light .
462 To understand this in its ever creating action , is to understand the language of symbology .
463 . a) Copied by Gr . from (?) .
Chala . All that man sees is his own thought ; man out of his thought can produce a ghost, a satan or a devil ; or he can produce God, the most Merciful and compassionate .
b) A typewritten copy with savings meant for publi-
Chala . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -thought . Cont . b) 179
180 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) cation in the "Vadan" . (Gd .'s bookpreparation) .
Man - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- - - -a Satan or a devil, or - etc .
464 a) A sentence in the lec- C'est l'insincerit€, l'amertume , ture 'Intuition', 22nd . . 1) porter rancune, A pouvoir 2) May 1922, in M .lle Le- empecher 1'intuition . febvre's handwriting . (A reporting of the simultaneous translation in French) . Notes : 1) one word illegible . 2) not clear in the MS . It could be 'pouvoir' . b) Copied by M .lle Le- C'est le manque de sincerite , fAbvre from her own re- 1'amertume, la tendance A is rancune, porting . qui emp@chent 1'intuition . c) Copied as a saying by C'est le manque de sinc€ritd , Gd . l'amertume, une disposition rancunicre qui empeche l'intuition . d) An English translation It is insincerity, bitterness, artiof the lecture in Sada- ficiality and spite which keep inruny's handwriting, tuition away .
465 . a) The last sentence in the Puisque 1'homme, ce n'est pas son lecture 'Intuition', corps, mais son mind, c'est la sant€ 22nd May 1922, in M .lle du mind qui est la vraie sante, et Lefebvre's handwriting . le rAsultat de cette sante, c'es t (A reporting of the 1'intuition . 3) simultaneous translatio n in French) . Note 3) : Translation by compiler : As man is not his body, but his mind, it is the health of the mind which is the real health, and the outcome of that health is intuition . b) An English translation As man is not his body, he is his of this sentence as a mind . Mind is the real health . The separate saying, in Sa- outcome of this health is intuition . daruny's handwriting .
466 .
180
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Sufism', 23rd July 1922 (Social Gatheka no . 7), reported or copied from (?) by Miss R .Jones .
If man is himself, the whole world is his own . If he is not himself, then even his self does not belong to him .
b) Copied by Gd . 'From Gathekas' and meant for publication in the "Gayan" . Four words were crosse d
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -world be -l erige - to- him is his own . If h e
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . Bolas III . Cont . b)
18 1 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) out, probably by - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - is Mc ., who wrote 'Bolas his ownt if no t III' over it and in the even his self - - - - - etc . margin : 'similar to
another' . 467 a) Words spoken during an Evening Class on 14th August 1922, in an unidentified handwriting . (Sangatha II - 50) .
When man says, "I have done this", or "i can do it", or "I will do it", the One perfect in power and wisdo m smiles, as a grown-up person would smile at a child saying "I will remove mountains . "
b) Copied by Gd . 'From Sangathas' and meant for publication in the "Gayan" . In Mc .' s handwriting was written 'Omit' in the margin . 468 . a) The last part of the The best medicine is a pure diet, lecture 'Healing' of nourishing food, fresh air, regular28th July 1924, reported ity in action and repose, clearness by Sk . of thought, pureness of feeling, and Sk .'s shorthand and her confidence in the perfect Being with transcription of it . Whom we are linked, and Whose expression we are . b) Copied by Ng . as a - - - - - - - - - is _ pure diet, saying, together with regularother sentences from ity in sleep and action, fresh air, lectures . clear thinking, purity fe-eling_ and perfect confidence in the Divine Being with Whom we are linked_ and Whose essence 1) we are . Note 1) : Sk .'s shorthand has 'expression' ; the next sentence in the lecture 'Healing', however, reads : 'That is the essence of health' . Therefore 'essence' under b) may have been taken erroneously for 'expression' .
469 . a) MS . Fm .
Alterations by Inayat Khan :
Gamaka . Who, do you think, give me over to my scornful opponents : Who eagerly await such opportunity ; most often my own loving friends . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - opponents : who - - - - - - - - -opportunity ; My own loving friends .
b) Copied by Gd . with other sayings, - - - - - - - -
etc . - - - - - - Cont . b) 181
182 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) meant for publics- - - - - - - opportunity ? - - - etc . tion in the "Nirtan" .
470 a) The last sentence in the lecture 'The God Ideal', 22nd November 1921 (Religious Gatheka no . 31) . No reporting of it has been found in the archives to date, only a typewritten copy .
It is not the path of freedom that leads to the goal of freedom, but the path of the God-Ideal that leads to the goal of Truth .
b) Copied by Gd ., together with other sentences, meant for publication in the "Vadan", under the heading 'Sayings (to be read to Pir-oMurshid)' .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - of freedom ; but it is the - - - - - - - - - - - - etc .
Gd . crossed out the first part of the sentence (14 words) and three words of the second part .
It is the oath of God that leads to the goal of Truth .
471 . a) MS . Sk .
Reaching perfection is contemplating on perfection .
b) Crossed out by Gd . who replaced it by :
Saying . One reaches perfection Ily contemplating on perfection .
a) Copied by Gd . from (?) .
Chala . Why are people so stupid? Because they enjoy being so .
b) A typewritten copy of sayings meant to be published in the "Vadan" . ( Gd .'s bookpreoaration) .
Chala .
472 .
- - - - - - - - - - - -
473 . a) A sentence in the lec- A modest person in comparison to the ture 'Heya' - Moral immodest one is like a plant standing Culture (Gatha Saluk III by the side of a rock . No . 8), Summer 1922, reported by Sk . (Sk .'s shorthand and her transcription of it) . b) Copied by Gd . 'From Ga- A modest person, in comparison with thas' together with the immodest one , is - - - - - etc . other sayings meant fo r 182 publication in the "Gayan" . c)
18 3 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
c) Another copy found in The modest person, compared to the Gd .'s handwriting . immodest - - - - - - - - - - etc .
474 . Copied by Gd . 'From In the progress of the world ideal is Gathekas', together with the principal thing . What the world other sayings meant for needs is not a certain religion, it publication in the needs the spirit of religion . "Gayan" . Mc . replaced 'ideal' by 'idealism', then crossed out the whole saying .
475 . A sentence in the lec- The Prophet is an interpreter of the ture 'The Prophet' (Re- divine law in human tongue . ligious Gatheka No . 10), 19th August 1922, in Miss Jones's handwriting . See Sayings I
: "Gayan" - Chala 27 under a), first saying .
47 6 Message . MS . Fm ., together with other The Prophet's charm is his personality . sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" . Copied by Km . Add . by Inayat Khan to Message . MS . Fm . - - - - - - - -
Bola (also) . - - - -
.
47 7 MS . Sk . Please take no discouraging remarks In her handwriting is from friends or foes to be effective . written underneath : Think Whose Cause it is, and be sure 'As dictated by Murshid that all will be well in the end . If in answers to letters to F . did not come, Z . will come ; if M . different persons . will not help, N . will support . W e Sakina .' recognize only one help and one support, and that is the help of God . If the whole world failed us still we shall maintain our faith that the One, Whose service we do, will not fail us . All the outside things matter little ; it is, that something which is hidden behind, counts .
478 . MS . Sk . I do not take things seriously to In her handwriting is heart, you do not need to worry written underneath : about it . 'As dictated by Mursnid I have forgiven, from the day I in answers to letters to called you my brother, all you did, Cont .) 183
184 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont .) different persons . you do and that you may do . For I Sakina .' know it all comes from love, and i t is the love of one being, and that is God . I continue to pray for you .
479 . a) MS . Gr .
A straight road before the soul that he may reach the goal .
- - - - - - - - - - - b) Copied by Gd ., together with other sayings, mostly meant for publication in the "Gayan " 480 . Copied by Gd . 'From Q . and A .' 1) , together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" .
What does it matter if the scientist calls his religion science, if the literary man calls his, ideals and morals ?
A few alterations in Mc .'s handwriting :
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - science or if the - - - - - - - - - -his, idealism and morality ?
Then the whole sentence was crossed out and in the margin was written in Mc .'s handwriting : 'Omit .' Note 1) : 'Q . and A .' means : Inayat Khan' s answers to questions . These have not been found as such in the archives to date .
481 . Copied by Ng ., probably Sura . from her own MS ., to- Our deep sentiments we cannot tell gether with other Suras, to anyone ; Truth is the deepest senmeant for publication in timent of the soul, therefore it canthe "Gayan" . not be told .
482 . MS . Ng . Heathen Saying . Copied by Km . A tenderhearted sinner is better than one who is hardened by piety . 2 ) Note 2) : For comolete elaborations and different versions see Sayings I : "Gayan" - Bola 37 .
483 . a) Copied by Gd . from (?)
Bola . It is the slave who gives in, the Master struggles, but the Lord rises above all conditions of life .
184
b)
18 5 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) A typewritten copy, to- Bola . gether with other sayings - - - - - - - - - - - meant for publication i n the "Vadan" (Gd .'s bookpreparation) .
484 . a)
Copied by Gd . from (?), together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Nirtan" .
Bola . Someone much sought for becomes cost ly .
b)
A typewritten copy with sayings prepared by Gd . for publication in the "Vadan" .
Bola . - - - - - - -sought after becomes cost ly .
a)
Two sentences in the lecture The liberal and Conservative Point of View' (Social Gatheka no . 9), 30th July 1922 , in Gd .'s, Kf .'s and Miss R .Jones's handwriting,
Therefore the conservative spirit i s the individualizing spirit, which i s the central theme of the whole cre ation .
Copied by Gd . 'From Gathekas', together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" . In Mc .'s handwriting the 'b' of 'but' was reolaced by a capital B , making it again two sentences and the last word was changed .
The conservative - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - the whole creation, but there - - - - - - - etc .
a)
Copied by Gd . from (?) .
If anyone talks to me against anothe r out of spite my heart instantly goe s out to the one of whom ill word s have been spoken .
b)
A typewritten copy with sayings meant for publication in the "Vadan " (Gd .'s bookpreoaration) .
Bola . - - - - - - - - - - - -
MS . Gd . Found together with other savings with th e "Gayan"-documents .
The stillness of the idol stills th e mind of the idol worshipper .
485 .
b)
But there is always a danger of thi s spirit, if increased, producing congestion .
The conservative - - - - - - - etc . - - - - - - - - - - - - - creation . But there is - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - stagnation .
-
486 .
.
487 .
185
186
ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
488 . Gamaka . MS . Gd ., together with other The struggle of life in the world is sayings meant for pub- the one thing which I dread the most, lication in the "Gayan" . yet destiny has placed me in the very midst of it .
Two words crossed out by - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mc . - - - - thing I dread _ most, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . 489 a) A sentence in the lecture 'Sufism' (Social Gatheka no .- 7), 23rd July 1922, in Miss R . Jones's handwriting .
Success is natural, failure is unnatural .
b) Copied by Gd . 'From Gathekas', together with other sayings found with the Gayan-documents .
490 . Two sentences found as a The Sufi holds that the perfection separate saying in an un- of life is perfecting oneself not dated lecture about only spiritually, but in all different 'Sufism', of which only aspects of life . The man who is not typewritten fragments capable of attending to all life's have been found in the needs is certainly ignorant of the archives to date . true freedom of life .
491 . a) Copied by Gd ., probably from her own MS .
What is
the
What is the Inayat Khan wrote in the margin : 'Put on separate page' .
What is
the
What is the What is the What is the
religion of the Sufi ? Natural life . manner of the Sufi ? Simplicity . goal of the Sufi ? Self-realization . God of the Sufi ? His very being . path of the Sufi ? Friendship . art of the Sufi ?
Humility . What is the charm of the Sufi ? Personality . What is the moral of the Sufi ? Beneficence . What is the cross of the Sufi ? Forgiveness . What is the Beloved of the Sufi ? God . What is the ideal of the Sufi ? Man . Mc . altered 'moral' (8th line) into 'morality' .
186
What
is
the morality of the Sufi ? Beneficence .
b)
18 7 ORIGIN and elaborations :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) Published in the magazine 'Sufism', June 1923 .
Sufi Characteristics .
9th question : What 11th ( last ) question :
is the attitude of the Sufi? What is the Ideal of the Sufi ?
Note : version b) also became Sangita
111-6 .
492 a) A typewritten copy with other sayings about a Sufi, in the form of questions and answers, part of which became a Sangita .
What is a Sufi ? One who does not separate himself from others by opinion or dogma, and who realises the heart as the shrine of God . What does he desire ? To remove the false ego and discover God within . What does he teach? Happiness . What does he seek? Illumination . What does he see? Harmony . What does he give? Love to all created things . What does he get? A greater power o f love . What does he find? God . What does he lose? Self .
b) Printed at the beginning of each issue of 'The Sufi Quarterly', Sept . 1926-March 1933 .
A Sufi Dialogu e
2nd answer : 8th question and answer : 9th question and answer :
To remove the false self and What does he find? GOD . And lose? self .
492A . Who has lost Me is lost ; who has found MS . Gd . Me has found himself . and a stencilled H .Q copy . Cf . Sayings I : "Vadan" - Gamaka 19 . 492B a) Copied by Ng . from (?) .
Tala . Love from above is forgiveness . From below is Devotion . From within is kindness and from without is affection .
b) Copied by Ek . and classified by Inayat Khan as 'Ta1' .
Tala . - - - - - - - - - - - - -
c) Only the first two lines were published in the "Gayan" - Tala 3 . 493 . a) A sentence in the lec- All things that deprive one of one's ture 'Concentration' - freedom in life are undesirable . a) 187 Everydaylife (Gatha II- Cont .
188 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) No . 2 ), 28th July 1922, in Miss R .Jones's and Kf .' s handwriting . b) Copied by Gd . 'From Gathas', together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Gayan" . Two words altered by Mc .
- - - - - - - - deprive man of his freedom - - - - - - - - - . -
49 4 a) Copied by Gd . from (?), together with other sayings meant for publication in the "Vadan" .
Tala . Tone continues, time expires .
b) A typewritten cony . (Gd .'s bookoreoaration of the "Vadan"_) .
Tala . - - - - - - - - - - - -
49 5 Copied by Gd . together with sayings meant cation in the
from (?), other for publi"Vadan" .
Tala . Tone lives on time ; time assimilates tone .
496 a) The last sentence in the lecture 'The way how the wise make life in the world,' of 22 . Aug . 1922, not known by whom reported . Only Sk . hwr . copy, a typed and a stencilled copy are in the archives . (= Religious Gatheka no . 11 . )
Verily, truth is the treasure that every soul is seeking .
b) Copied by Gd . 'From Gathekas' .
Verily_ truth is - - - - - - etc .
The whole saying was crossed out, probably by Mc .
497 a) Two sentences in the lec- The real meaning of initiation is to ture 'The message' 1), be reborn, to be born again . The 16th June 1925, reported first birth is the birth of th e
by Sk . (shorthand and person, the next birth is the birth and her transcription) . of the soul . b) From nine typewritten Initiation is in reality sayings (= sentences in to be born again . The lectures and Questions first birth is the birth of th e and Answers) under the person, the second birth is the birth 188 Cont . b)
18 9 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . b) heading 'Written of the soul . down by memory durin g the Summer School 1925' . Note 1) : This same lecture is also Sangita 1-116 'The Message - Wakening to the Message' .
498 . A sentence in the lec- A true worshipper of God sees His ture 'Saluk', Moral oresence in all forms and in respectCulture - Resoect (Gatha ing others he respects God . , III no . 4), Summer 1922, reported by Sk . (shorthand and her transcription) . See Sayings I
: "Gayan" - Chala 16 for elaboration and different version .
499 . On a stencilled Head Chala . Quarter's copy, prepared In the vastly prevailing flood of by Gd ., with sayings feeling the spirit of action becomes meant for publication in drowned . the "Vadan" .
500 a) The last sentencesof the The man who will shut up himself from lecture 'The soul's mani- all men, however high spiritual he festation', 1st September may be, he will not be free in the 1923, reported by Sk . Malakut, in the higher sphere . He Sk .'s shorthand and her will have a wall around him keeping transcription of it . away djinns, even angels when in th e angel world ; and so his journey is The lecture was published exclusive . It is therefore that Suin 1924/1925 in the book fism does not only teach concentra'The Soul Whence and tion and meditation which help one Whither?' - Manifesta- to make one onesided 2), but the love tion, Chapter 3 . of God which is expansion, opening o f the heart to all . Note 2) : one shorthand sign illegible . b) A typewritten version The man who shuts himself away from together with other all men - however high spiritually he sayings, taken from the may be, he will not be fre e Magazine 'The Sufi Quar- in the higher spheres . He terly' of June 1932, will have around him a wall keeping under the heading 'Un- away the genii from the sphere of published Sayings, ore- djinns, and even the angels of the served by Nargis .' angelic heavens . So his journey i s exclusive . It is therefore that Sufism does not only teach concentration and meditation, which help one to make onesided progress , but also the love of God, which is exoansion - the opening of the heart to all beings, which is the Way of Christ and the Sign of the Cross . Note) 189
190 ORIGIN and elaboration : Note
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
: See Sayings II : Part Four no . 318 (the first sentence only) .
501 a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Purpose of Life', 28th July 1924, reported by Sk . Sk .'s shorthand and her transcription of it .
The true religion is living and being conscious of this sense of duty that we have toward man and towards God .
The lecture was published in the book 'The Purpose of Life' (1927) , Chapter 7 . b) In Ng .'s handwriting, together with other sentences from lectures, as separate sayings .
True religion is "living" , and being conscious of th e duty man has toward man and towards God .
a) Part of two sentences in the lecture 'The Prophet' (Religious Gatheka no . 10), 19th August 1922, in Miss R . Jones's handwriting .
The Prophet is an interpreter of the Divine law in human tongue, he is an Ambassador of the spiritual hierarchy for he represents to humanity the illuminated souls who are known and unknown to the world, who are hidden and manifest, who are in the world, or on the other side of the world . The Prophet is an Initiate and Initiator, for he is an answer to the cry of humanity, of individuals, and of the collectivity . . . . .
b) From a collection of sayings under the heading : 'Murshid's sayings passed on by Nargis .'
The Prophet is an Ambassador of the Spiritual Hierarchy for He represents to humanity the Illuminated Souls who are known and unknown to the world, who are hidden and manifest . The Prophet is an Initiate and an Initiator . An answer to the cry of humanity, individually and collectively .
502
Cf . Sayings I : "Gayan" - Chala 27 and Sayings II Part Two, no . 475 .
503 a) The last sentence in the lecture 'Healing by Suggestion', (Gita Healing, Series III-7 )1 920, of which only old typewritten copies and a handwritten copy by Miss R . Jones probably of a later date, hav e 190 been found in the ar-
When the healer thinks he is healing, his power is as small as a drop, when he thinks God is healing, and when from his thought his own self is forgotten and he is only conscious of the self of God, then his power becomes as large as the ocean .
Cont .a)
19 1 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a) chives to date . Published in 1931 in the book 'Health', Part II . b) From a collection o f sayings under the heading : 'Murshid's sayings passed on by Nargis . '
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - a drop_ When he thinks - - - - - - - - and when self is from his thought _ forgotten, and - - - - - - - of the Self of God, - - - - - - - - - - - _ - - - - - - - - Ocean .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'Fulfilment of the Obligations of Human Life', 4th September 1922, taken down by a professional shorthand writer and published in 1923 in the book 'Inner Life' , Chanter 3 .
Friends, there is nothing in this world, wealth or rank, position, power or learning, that can give such conceit as the slightest little amount of spiritual knowledge, and once a person has that conceit then he cannot take a further step ; h e is nailed down to that place where he stands, because the very idea of spiritual realization is in self- lessness .
b) From a collection of sayings under the heading : 'Murshid ' s sayings passed on by Nargis .'
Friends, there is nothing - - etc . - - - - - - - - - - knowledge . Once - - - - - - - - - - - - -etc . - -nailed down to the place - etc . - - - - - - - - - selflessness .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Purpose of Life', 28th July 1924, reported by Sk . (Sk .'s shorthand and her transcription) . Published in the book 'The Purpose of Life' Chapter 7 (1927) .
In duty one finds a road which leads to the final purpose of life .
b) A typewritten copy with sayings under the heading 'Written down by memory during the Summer School 1924' .
In duty one finds the road which leads us to the goal which is the purpose of life .
a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Message' (Religious Gatheka no . 45), 22nd June 1921, found only typewritten .
Now the question "What is pain" may be explained thus that pain is the fullest aspect of life .
504
505 .
506 .
b) In Sr .'s copybook of 1921 was written as a separate sentence :
Pain is the fullest aspect of life . 191
192 ORIGI N
and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
507 . a) A sentence in the lecture 'The Message' (Religious Gatheka no .45), 22nd June 1921, found only typewritten .
Man's real being is his heart, and in pain the heart becomes living and without pain man seems to be living on the surface .
b) In Sr .'s copybook of 1921 was written as a separate sentence :
- - - - - - - - - - - - heartand in pain his heart - - - - - --- - - - - - - pain he (live s (seems to live on the surface .
508 . Three sentences, added The more you depend upon God, the to the Bolas in later more God becomes dependable . editions of the "Nirtan" . 509 . 510 .
Love's The
reward
essence
of
is
love
reason of God .
is
itself . the
knowledge
They do not appear in the "Nirtan" as first Published by Kismet Stam, nor in the following edition published by the Sufi Movement . It may be assumed that these sentences were taken from Inayat Khan's lectures .
511 . a) Two sentences in the lec- The great minds, the masters think ture 'The Way of Attain- that behind their thought, their ment' (Sadhana), 1921/ will, there is the will of God . They 1922, found in Gd .'s have confidence in that will, and handwriting . whatever they think is done . b) As a separate sentence, The great minds, the Masters_ know in an unidentified hand- that behind their thought and their writing ; it was found will, is the will of God, they with Gd .'s bookprep- have confidence in that Will, and aration of 'The Unity of whatever they think, is done . Religious Ideals' .
512 a) Three sentences in the It may be asked whether all things lecture 'The Way of cannot be attained by psychic power Attainment' (Sadhana), alone without any physical means . 1921/1922, found in But, as we exist on the physical Gd .'s handwriting . plane and have the physical body, i t is better to work with the Physical means also, to work by the thought and with the body . In this way the aim is attained by all means . 192
b)
19 3 ORIGIN and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
b) As a separate saying, in It may be asked whether all things an unidentified handwrit- cannot be attained by psychic power ing, it was found with alone, without any physical means, Gd .'s bookpreoaration but as we exist on the physical of 'The Unity of Re- plane and have a physical body, it ligious Ideals' . is better to use _ physica l means also . To work by the thought and with the body, in this way the aim is attained by all means .
513 a) Two sentences in the lec- The warner, the master, the messenger ture 'The Spiritual Hier- of to-day will not claim ; he will archy', (1917-1920) re- only work . He will leave his work to ported and revised by prove for itself whether it is true Or . Gruner as published or false . in the book 'In an Eastern Rosegarden', 1st ed . 1920/1921 . b) Copied by Ng . under the The Warner, the Master, the Messenger heading 'Some sayings of to-day, will not claim, he wil l only work . He will leave his work to of Murshid' . prove for itself, whether it is true or false .
514 . a) Three sentences (two of which partly) in the lecture 'The Development of Ego ' (= Gatha Moral Culture - Saluk II No . 8), 9th May 1921, in Miss R . Jones ' s handwriting .
When a person wishes to keep away from all jarring influences, he had better not try to live , It does not require strength to stand against the jarring influences of life it is a small piece of wood, little and light that can fall and rise with the waves, be always above them uninjured and safe . The lighter, the smaller man's ego becomes the more power of endurance it has .
b) Copied by Ng . under the heading 'Some sayings of Murshid' .
When a person - - - - - - - - etc . - - - - - - - live . It does not - - - - - - - - - etc . life .
It is a small piece of wood , little and light, that can rise and fall with the waves, always above them, uninjured and safe . The lighter_ and smaller man's ego becomes , the more power and endurance it has .
515 . a) A sentence in the lec- Even in the case of a Teacher the ture 'About Disciple- devotee may make a mistake by halting ship', 18th May 1921 at the feet of the teacher and not (Sangatha 111-30) in progressing to God . Cont . a) 193
19 4 ORIGIN
and elaboration :
DIFFERENT VERSIONS :
Cont . a)Kf .'s handwriting . b) Copied by Ng . under the Even in the case of the teachers the heading 'Some sayings - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - etc . of Murshid' .
51 6 a) Two sentences in the lec- The secret of discioles-iip is not ture 'About Disciple- study or contemplation, but devotion . ship' (Sangatha 111-30) At that moment it is not Murshid but 18th may 1921, in Kf .'s God Who is seen, the door is unlocked, handwriting . the shrine opened, it is no more Murshid but God . b) Copied by Ng . under the The secret of discipleship is not heading 'Some sayings in study - - - - - - - - - - - - - . of Murshid' . At the moment - - - - - - - - - etc . the shrine is opened, it is no more Murshid1 but God .
517 a) Two sentences in the lec- For the Teacher one has gratitude ture 'About Disciple- but love and devotion is for God . ship' (Sangatha 111-30), God alone deserves all love and the 18th May 1921, in Kf .'s freedom of Love is in giving it to handwriting . God . b) Copied by Ng . under the For the Teacher one has gratitude, heading 'Some sayings but love and devotion are for Go . alonel Who deserves all love dofMurshi' ;and the freedom of l ove is in giving it to God . Note : The second part of the saying was published in Sayings II : Part One, "The Bowl of SAki" under 16th September .
517A . Notebooks 1922 Be either false or true but not both if you wish success . /if you wish to be successful . Note : The first part of the saying was published in Sayings I, "Gayan", Bola 7 .
194
19 5
P A R T T H R E E HITHERTO UNPUBLISHED SAYINGS AND WORDS OF PIR-O-MURSHID INAYAT KHAN , found in the handwriting of some of his early mureeds .
195
19 7
INTRODUCTION TO PART THREE .
These additional sayings and other words of Inayat Khan are so far unpublished 1), just as are the sayings and other words in Part Two . For this reason the unpublished sayings and words of Part Two and Part Three were consecutively numbered . In most cases it cannot be ascertained if these sayings were dictated by Inayat Khan to his oupils . They were found in the handwriting of some of his early mureeds ; the sub-title over each group of sayings gives some further particulars . Dr . Gruner handed down typewritten copies of the . sayings transmitted by him and probably destroyed his shorthand notes .
Note 1) : An exception was made for some sayings, published in old Sufi Magazines and pamphlets and for two sayings, quoted by Ng . in her book 'The Way of Return' . These publications are mentioned in the left column .
197
19 9 PART THREE . The following sayings and other words of Fir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan were received, collected and transmitted by some of his early mureeds : written down and preserved by_Miss_Angelaalt . ---------------------------- -518 . I wish that my mureeds everywhere should work towards the enlightenment of humanity . 519 . All that begins in unhappiness and ends in discontent is wrong . And all that begins in happiness and culminates into content is right . (given privately) 520 . The heart is as the angelic body, the soul's finest body, yet only a temporary hotel of soul . The heart is the shrine of God . 521 . With indifference, one still must have sympathy and love, be more and more sensitive as one evolves . 522 . Nirvana Fang Vairagi a Indifference independence dispassion . 523 . I come from a perfect Source . I am going to a perfect Goal . The light of the perfect Being is kindled in my soul . And in Him I live and move and have my being . 1 ) Note 1) : Another version was found in Miss Reza Jones's handwriting (see no . 642) . In_Begum_Inayat_Khan's-handwriting . ---------------524 .
An Eastern person is inclined to give even to material things a spiritual meaning . A Western person, on the contrary, is inclined to give every spiritual thing a material form . Partly_taken_downs_partly_cooiedl_collected_and passed_on_by_Miss_Narois Dowland .
525 . It is the desire to learn, not to teach, by which one becomes a Teacher . 526 . The explanation of a God-ideal is : closed lips . 527 . Every lesson learnt in the inner life must be brought down and practised on earth before it is of real value on the oath of discipleship . This is not generally realized, but only thus is true Progress achieved . 528 . As soon as a disciple says : "I know" he loses ground . All great Teachers of humanity have been great Pupils ; learning from an innocent child, from situations, etc ., he learns sympathy, harmony and beauty . 529 . Meditation is for a ourpose, not an end in itself . -530- 199
200 . 530 . Initiation signifies the entrance of a stranger into the bond of human brotherhood, so that the usual consideration of earthly distinctions and differences which separate man from man may be abolished . 531 . Mysticism is an experience ; it cannct be studied, it cannot be out into words, it cannot be explained or talked about . Those who write explanations of it, or talk about colours, spirits, visions, experiences etc ., are not true mystics . 532 . What is necessary just now is not only that brotherhood should be taught as morals, but as spirit, as a spiritual law . This whole manifestation is one whole mechanical working wherein every soul has its place . There is not one soul in the whole universe, which is a foreign soul . It is this Brotherhood which must be realized . 533 . When a person attains seership, he rises above such things as palmistry, crystal gazing etc . etc . ; for him they have no use . 534 . It is the Call from above which strikes the note of the day . 535 . If you believe in no God, worship Nature . 536 . On the Spiritual Path one unlearns what one has already learnt ; it means emptying oneself . 537 . The secret of Peace is hidden under the cover of the ego . 538 . Rising above a religion does not mean giving up the religion, it means being fully benefitted by it . Those who say they have given up their religion, are not above it ; they alone are above it who have reached a full understanding of the Spirit of Religion . 539 . The more we sympathize with ourselves, the heavier becomes the burden of the soul to lift . 540 . The aim of the Sufi is not power or inspiration although by contemplation and meditation both will come as he proceeds forth . His only aim is to tread the Path until he can arrive no matter how long it may take . He does not worry about what sacrifice he will have to make . He desires one thing, be it God or Goal, the attainment of which is his perfection . 541 . (Personal development) . Life is blinding, and it keeps man busy and engaged finding fault with others . He does not find the "thorn" in himself ; he always sees it in others . 542 . Do not let your doubt stand against your trust . 543 . Do not forgive yourself for not forgiving others . 544 . Value the nobility of soul above all things . 545 . Respect every soul - worthy or unworthy . 546 . Work for the work - not for success . 200
547 . Arrest every impulse to examine it before it is expressed . -548-
20 1 548 . When we try too much, we miss the joy in the agony of doing .
549 . Care of the body is the first thing, and without it spirituality has very little significance . 550 . Imagination is the stepping-stone to realization . 551 . When I leave the earth, I would rather be known as the Consoler than the Teacher . 552 . One kindled soul proves greater in power than ten thousand souls groping in darkness . 553 . If in working we seem to fall, it is to rise still higher and with greater force . 554 . You must have in your hand a staff of Faith and hold a lantern of Truth . You must tolerate all, endure all things, forgive all ; then with the strength of selfconfidence and unshakable faith in the Message,you can serve with sincere devotion the Great Cause, which is striking the note to-day . 555 . Say little, serve all, pass on . This is true greatness : to serve unnoticed and work unseen . 556 . We rise by treading the Path of Faith . 557 . Some day we shall realize what God is, but that only comes after the first lesson has been learnt . 558 . My work is not to stay beside you, but to open your heart to receive the Light . 559 . The task of the Teacher in the past age was like walking on the ever moving water . The task of the Teacher in the present age is like walking barefooted on unsheathed swords . 560 . The chief object of creation is the formation of the Bodhisattva . 561 . The Lord Maitreya, the Bodhisattva Spirit or Spirit of Guidance, working in man, fulfils his mission in a planet . On the fulfilment of his mission he is crowned Rassoul . (Note : one in every cycle .) 1 ) Note 1) : This addition was found with the saying . 562 . All the essence which rises from the intelligence of humanity, merges into the Spirit of Guidance, the Bodhisattva ; and all waste matter coming from the Spirit of Guidance goes to make the intellect of man . 563 . All Masters and Saints are group-souls . The souls belonging to a group-soul are not equal, but each is different and has a different purpose to fulfil . The Master is not complete until all souls in the group are perfected . 564 . We shall never know ourselves as part of God until we first realize that every mind is part of ourselves and that we are part of every mind . 565 . Intelligence of humanity is the all pervading undifferentiated Spirit of God . (Chaitanya ) -566- 201
202 566 . Every man on leaving this world, takes with him his own heaven or hell . 2 ) Note 2) : Dated : 2nd June 1921 . 567 . When treading the right path, if one wonders whether it be really right, that is worse than treading a wrong path with certainty . For all paths must lead sooner or later to the same Goal . 3 ) Note 3) : This saying was published in 'The Sufi Quarterly' of June 1932 . 568 . All that begins in doubt, continues in difficulty , and ends in unhappiness, is wrong . All that begins with faith, continues in faith and ends in joy, is right . 4 ) Note 4) : This saying was published in 'The Sufi Quarterly' of June 1932 . 569 . Murshid's blessing : May your heart be filled with heavenly joy , May your soul be illuminated with divine light, May your spirit uphold the divine Message , May you go on in the spiritual path , May God's peace abide with you for ever and evermore . 5 ) Note 5) : These lines were also found in Angela Alt's handwriting but incomplete . 570 . Your work you are doing, My work I am doing . And it is the co-operation of both out of which comes something . 6 ) Note 6 ) : Dated 12th May 1922 . 571 . It is the destiny of the Message to awaken humanity to a new spiritual consciousness . 572 . Our sympathy, our love for one another, our devotion to the Cause, our faith in God - with this organization we will work hand in hand . 573 . Action leads to perfection . 7) ' Note 7) : A typewritten version has 'Bola' over it . 574 . To accuse a person of his wickedness is a worse wickedness . 575 . All a Teacher can do is to prepare the vessel and pray that it may be filled with divine grace, but the vessel can only be filled after it is entirely empty, and only the pupil can do that . 576 . That which is a station to the novice is a veil to the adept . The real is a ceaseless experience ; maya is to cease from that experience in order to talk about it . 577 .
202
Greatness is in humility wisdom is in modesty Success is in sacrifice Truth is in silence . Murshid Given at Suresnes, August 13 1923 as an address to Cherags ; later made into Gatheka 23 .
20 3 578 . All the studies in Sufism are to teach us how to govern life's subtle forces . 579 . Brain is the instrument through which thought works . Thought is far greater than the brain . Imaginatio n is uncontrolled thought . Thought is controlled imagination . 580 . The soul is pure of characteristics, it takes them as it passes through the spheres . 581 . It is not every soul who is developed enough to see God in wood, and stone, and in all things ; when one has reached this realization, he has touched perfection . 582 . Faith is a sacred thing, because it cannot be given, it must be developed within oneself . 583 . Verily he is blessed, who can rest in the thought of God . Verily he is blessed, to whom God's call comes . Verily he is blessed, whose eyes have seen the Beauty of God . And Verily he is twice blessed, who soeaketh of God, with closed lips . 8 ) Note 8) : Dated 28th May 1922 . These four sentences were found in Ng .'s handwriting as one saying, of which the first, third and fourth were published in Ng .'s book 'Between the Desert and the Sown' . Inayat Khan wrote 'Suras' over it . Dictated to and reserved b Miss Sakina Furn6e .
584 . Mastering means not killing the senses . Mastering means conquering the senses, using the senses as one likes and not to be used by them . 585 . Man's heart is visualized in the Shrine of God and even a small injury in thought, word and deed against it, is considered as a great sin against God, the Indwelling One . 586 . So much good as a man has in him, so much bad he has, (Wagner - English people did not understand his harmony, throwing with stones at him during a performance of his music .) So what is called bad is only what does not go in with the vibrations of a certain surrounding . Therefore two things are important in life : to advance in wisdom and to keen it secret in the heart ; and to try to cope with others, whatever be their stage of evolution . 587 . Death is a greater joy to me than life .
But the fulfilment of the purpose, a still greater joy . 588 . It is worse than death to me to have to tell a mureed his fault . It is as if I tell from having committed that fault myself . -589203
204 589 . Sound is hidden under words and words are hidden under sound . When one oerceives the words, one does not perceive the sound underneath, and when one perceives sound, one does not perceive the words underneath . When the poet perceives word, the musician perceives sound underneath . The mystic perceives even in that sound a word which was God . 590 . Rebelling against what our soul knows to be wrong, is right . 591 .
Incense : that which has gone through the fire, rises to God ; incense is from the earth, enters by breath into our being, where is the Kingdom of God .
592 . Life, like every other blessing, derives its value from its use alone . 593 . Meditation means uniting with the Self . Hands on knees, lower part in connection with higher part . 594 . Symbology 1) . The heart of man is as a rosebud and as the bloom of the rose comes from the sunny cross, so the heart, as a rose blooms when it has met with life's cross . Note 1) : Inayat Series by Gd . in her
Khan added 'Sangatha I', which was crossed out and replaced by 'Saying' handwriting .
595 . Congestion comes from closing of circulation . (natural restrain or excess of expressing natural tendencies) . 596 . Freedom of action is a good thing, but it must be considered with the freedom of result . 597 . Vanity is the deepest depth of the nature of the Spirit . Without vanity no art would have been . 598 . Moral is nothing but a law of adjustment . To a metaphysician it is of no importance at all what the moral can teach ; it is allright for a priest . Note : These sayings were dated : Summer School 1921 . 599 . Humanity has learned enough to fight very wellperfected . Not what is needed is fight with oneself . All energy and strength must be given to fight oneself . Oneself is one's enemy . Then there will come peace . 600 . Spiritual line is the line, not scientific . 601 . The only things that hinder in the spiritual path are enmity, spite and bitterness . All other sins don't matter . 602 . For those who seek after spiritual truth, association with friends in the same path is more _precious than anything in the world . 2 ) Note 2) : This saying was published in the Magazine 'The Sufi' of July 1938 .
204
20 5 Preserved and transmitted-byurshida Sharifa -------------------------- ----------Goodenough .
603 . A mystic's God is Reality . 604 . Man's aim is the aim of the whole world - consciousness, to be conscious, to know . This is the aim of the mineral world, the vegetable and the animal world . The tree, in its decay, in its annihilation, becomes many thousand germs and worms . The worms and insects become birds and animals and the animal becomes man . 605 . A painter paints a little picture . It is sold for thousands of dollars . He is admired as so great an artist, and no one thinks how great an Artist is He Who made that on the model of which the painting is made . The justice existed in the Consciousness before our justice was made . 606 . We cannot say that the carpenter creates the tables and chairs . He takes wood of which to make them .
We cannot say that we create anything . 607 . Perfection is applicable only to God and never to man so long as he remains man . 608 . We do not wish to interfere with world politics, but certainly work for the unity of nations and wish to spare no effort in abe+iahirg helping to destroy the moral degeneration of the present time, our only object being to bring about a better understanding between the different creeds, nations, and races, thus working toward the formation of one human brotherhood . 609 . God lost in the manifestation is the state which we call waking . 610 . To have consideration for another is the root of all religious laws . 611 . Love is a great inspirer of law . 1 ) Note 1) : In an old typewritten copy the last two words were omitted . 612 . Virtues are virtues because they give joy if the y are once _practised . If a virtue does not give a joy, it is not a virtue . 613 . A wise Person thinks another 2) knows as much as he knows, and a foolish one thinks another person 2) knows as little as he knows . Note 2) : In another copy Gd . suggested to reolace 'another' and 'another person' by 'one' . 614 . If we make the best of life, life will show its best side to us . 3 ) Note 3) : Another version has : 'life will show us its better side . ' 615 . That is not devotion which does not expand the heart . -616- 205
206 616 . When a person sees that another does not stand where he himself stands, he generally thinks the other has not that point ; he does not think that the other has passed it . And when he finds that another is not looking at what he himself is seeing, he most often supposes the other cannot see it, not that he is not interested in looking at it . (Another version : ) When a person sees that another is not looking at what he himself sees, he mostly thinks that he cannot see it ; he does not think he is not interested in looking at it . And when .a person sees that another is not in that .place where he himself is standing, he mostly thinks he has not reached it yet ; not that he has passed it . 617 . Looking at the past and finding one's errors is like cracking nuts and finding a shrivelled kernel . 618 . Looking at the past and recognizing one's mistakes is like mounting the steps of a staircase . 619 . The light is reflected through the current that links all the Murshids upon the mureed in accordance with his response . Handed down_byMurshida Sophia Saintsbury_ Gre2n . ---------- ------------------620 . There are three possible attitudes towards evil impressions . 1 . In the path of saintliness one must consider it to be karma and therefore be resigned to it . 2 . In the path of mastery - think it to be the evil force and fight against it . 3 . In the prophetic path that which has happened think it was from karma and what will happen think that you will struggle against it . Note : See Sayings II
: Part Two - no . 443 .
621 . Human beings living in their shells are mostly unaware of the privilege of life, and so are unthankful to the Giver of them . In order to see the Grace of God, man must open his eyes and raise his head from his little world, and then he will see above and below, to right and to left, before and behind, the Grace of God reaching him from everywhere in abundance . 622 . If we try to thank God, we might thank for thousands of years, and it would never be enough, but if man stays in his own little shell, he does not find the Grace of God, he finds misery, injustice, ugliness, coldness . 623 . When one looks down, one sees the mud ; when one looks up, one sees the sun, moon and planets . It all depends how we look, upwards or downwards .
206
-624-
20 7 624 . Every man has his own little world, so little sometimes that it is like a doll's house ; and in that little world he is not concerned with the world outside, or with the universe, he just lives in his small world so full of illness, misery and ill luck . He cannot come out of it, for he has built a little shell in which he lives, a shell of misery for himself ; he likes to live in it, for it is his own home . 625 . Balance must be maintained between what is physical and what is eternal, by being conscious of both . One must not dive so deep into eternity that one does not know what time is, nor be so immersed in the physical, that one is unaware of immortality . As there is night and day, so there is the change of consciousness from the physical to the spiritual, and from the spiritual to the physical . By keeping a balance between these two conditions, a person leads a complete life . Reported_ .pd_transmitted-by_Dr_- .C . Gruner . ------------ --------626 . To say "the Kingdom of God is at hand" is to say it is at your hand! So why look over the whole universe or 1) for a future life, when that which you seek is within - quite close, "at hand" ! Note 1) : In a later typewritten version (probably also Dr . Gruner's) under the heading "The Voice of Inayat Khan - Sayings", was added : (and) wait . 627 . The Sufi oath is to seek the Unity, and not get lost in variety . People may 2) take up philosophy, theosophy and the like, if they please . It is no concern 3) of the Sufi . He does not restrict them, even if they choose to be restricted . His path is direct to the Unity . The 4) path is the path of balance . Notes : In a later typewritten version (probably also Dr . Gruner's) under the heading "The Voice of Inayat Khan - Sayings" is mentioned : 2) 'can' . 3) 'But these are not the concern' . 4) 'His' . 628 . The object of the Sufi is to enter the Silence - to leave the form and the external and the attributes, and to cease striving for anything but the Goal . 629 . Good concentration is like a hot pan : the oil in it is always fluid, enabling things to cook quickly . Do not let the pan cool by extraneous occupation . If the mind is intensely concentrated on one thing, everything else that comes in the way will also be achieved . -630-
207
208 630 . If a Person considers two pictures and believes one is good and the other poor it is his choice . Why arouse the fire in his ego faculty by comments ; it is for him to choose . Some day he will understand (see) . 5) Note 5 : In a later typewritten version (probably also Dr . C-runer's) under the heading "The Voice of Inayat Khan - Sayings" the first sentence reads : If a person compares two pictures and believes one good and the other poor, it is his choice, let him be . In another typewritten version the whole saving reads : If a Person compares two pictures and calls one good and the other poor, let him be . There is no gain if the fire in his Ego-faculty be aroused . Some day he will see , 631 . God is not in Time ; therefore He is in the Silence . Sound is Part of the world of Time . 632 . The object of meditation is to raise the soul above both body and mind . 6 ) Note 6) : A later typewritten version (probably also Dr . Gruner_'s) under the heading "The Voice of Inayat Khan - Sayings" has : 'above the body and the mind' . 633 . The basis of every religion is the matter of saving the self or killing it . 7 ) Note 7) : Another typewritten version (probably also Dr . Gruner's) under the heading "The Voice of Inayat Khan - Sayings" has : The basis of every religion is 'to save the self' or 'to kill the self' . 634 . Self-realization is not the same as self-expression . It is not "work", it is not "art", it is not a realization of a mental or artistic self . It is not the creation of a thing that lives for ever like Shakespeare or Beethoven . It is realizing God . It is union with God . It is attainment . 635 . Divine perfection is Perfection in all powers and mysteries . These are manifested without specially striving for them . Note : These sayings may be dated between 1918 and 1920 . 208
-636-
20 9 Preserved and transmitted-byMahtab_van_Hogen_ -------------------------dorp . 636 . Have faith in your own ideal . 637 . Many followers, but rare it is to find a devotee . Many workers, but rare it is to find a trustee . Many worshippers, but rare it is to find a lover o f God . Many students, but rare it is to find one wh o glorifies the Lord . With most hearty blessings Inayat Khan 27 October 1923 . 1) Note 1) : These lines were found in Pir-oMurshid Inayat Khan's handwriting on the fly-leaf of a copy of the Gayan, given by Murshid to Mahtab van Hogendorp . From some of Miss Reza Jones 's-copybooks : -----------------------------
638 .
By realizing the divine in one's self, one begin s to respect one's self and others . This is th e commencement of the Kingdom of God .
639 .
Man's best cure is reliance on that Being Whos e creation he is and Who expresses Himself throug h him .
640 .
When Jesus Christ was asked : "Where is the proof o f the truth of your Message?", his answer was : "I n the hearts of my disciples ." He did not say : "I n
the miracles . " 641 .
The word "Nirvana" means "no colour" . The colours change into the one pure white light , the Light of God . 1 ) Note 1) : This saying was dated : 19th August 1923 .
642 .
I come from a perfect Sourc e And I return to a perfect Goal . The light of that Being is kindled in my soul . I live and move and have my being in God . Nothing in the past or the Present has power t o touch me . I rise above all . 2 ) Note 2) : This is another version of th e saying under 523 . From-one-of-Mrs-.-Kefayat_LLoyd's_copybooks : ----------------
643 . Occultism is to know the inner reason or cause of -Cont .)- 209
210 Cont .)
what the average man only sees as a result . 1) Note 1) : Dated : 13th June 1921 .
Found in Miss Kismet Stam's-handwriting . ---------------------------------644 . There are people who act as they act because they do not know why they act as they act . But if you could make them know why they act as th,ay act, they would be worse . 645 . Murshid once said in a letter : "My teaching has no particular teaching . .In other words, I teach what cannot very well be put into words . Besides, my way is not to urge, but to bring before humanity what is good and beautiful, and let them choose for themselves what they will . " From some of Mr_Sirdar-van-Tuvll_van- Serooskerken's --------------- ------- -------------notebooks .
646 .
The life of the disciples will always be to g o through different tests . It is by going, strong b y
their faith, through the tests, that they develop and show the peace of the Message . 647 .
All the tragedy in life is caused by self-conscious ness . Every pain and depression is caused by .this , and anything that can take away the thought of th e
self helps to a certain extent to relieve man from pain, but God-Consciousness gives a perfect relief .
From a personal talk with Murshid , Wissous, 1921 . 648 .
On tiredness . If If If If
it it it it
is is is is
a nervous thing, eat more meat . muscular, do physical exercise . brain, oil the head every night . (something else), it must be cured by th e physician .
649 .
In every problem you must see the line instead o f the points . That is Sufism . There are two points, but one line joins them . If you seek the point you will go to the one or to the other end, but if you hold the line, you understand the whole .
650 .
The Proohet sleeps as the crescent moon . As the bow , that shoots the arrow, the arrow being God . (for the description of the lif e of the prophet . )
651 . 210
Never hurt the human feelings in thought, word o r deed . The human heart is so delicate, it is like a -Cont .)-
21 1 Cont .) fine tissue . And when once there is a tear in the tissue you can repair it, yet the tear remains and so it is with the human heart . Once there is a tear in it, it can never be healed .
September 1922 . It is not known by whom these sayings have been passed on . They were found in the archives of the Nekbakht Foundation . ------------------------------------------------652 . All that is born, built, sprung or made, must one day be destroyed . 653 . Revelation is different from intuition, vision or inspiration . These are but for a time, but revelation is the continual outpouring of divine bliss . 654 . God is not kind only to a few, to those who are good . We can see that He sends the rain to all the trees and plants, not to a few only, the sun shines upon all, all are given food . Because His kindness is perfect . 655 . What is most necessary in order to acquire healing power? Will-power .
656 . Barriers are for those who cannot fly . 1 ) Note 1) : On a Sufi pamphlet from Brighton and on the cover of the Magazine "Sufism" (May 1921 - December 1924) edited by S .E .M . Green . 657 . The mind recognises the body, and the soul recognises the mind, because the body stands before the mind, and the mind stands before the soul, but the soul cannot recognise itself, because behind the soul there is nothing . It is all consciousness . The soul sees the mind and the body, it cannot see itself .
658 . There are three Lights . God, the Light of the Teacher, and the manifested Word . The Consciousness makes from itself the other two Lights, by which it experiences Life . This is the meaning of the Christian Trinity . My definition of Light is "that which appears", all that appears can only annear by the radiance of the Light that is in it . 659 . Pir-o-Murshid told a mureed : The The The The
colour colour colour colour
of of of of
Christianity is red . Islam is green . Buddhism is yellow . Judaism is blue .
211
21 3
P A R T F O U R SAYINGS PUBLISHED AS "APHORISMS" .
213
21 5 TNTRODUCTION TO PART FOUR . ------------------------This part gives a selection of sayings collected by Mrs . Kefayat LLoyd from Inayat Khan's lectures . They were published under the title 'Aphorisms' in the 'Sufi Quarterly', a philosophica l review, edited by Ronald A .L . Mumtaz Armstrong . In seven successive numbers of this review appeared a chapter containing Aphorisms (December 1927, March 1928, June 1928, September 1928, December 1928, March 1929 and June 1929) . About the way Kefayat LLoyd used to collect sayings from Inayat Khan's lectures and the latter's approval of it, something was told in Kefayat's Biographical sketch in the Biography of Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan , published by East-West Publications in 1979 . In 1929/1930 Mumtaz Armstrong published a stencilled booklet, called 'The Aphorisms of Inayat Khan', in which the above mentioned seven chapters were put together, in the same sequence as in 'The Sufi Quarterly' . To this collection he added 70 more aphorisms . It is not known if these too were selected by Kefayat LLoyd ; no indication about it was made by Mumtaz Armstrong in his preface to the booklet . Besides sentences from Inayat Khan's lectures, this last part of the booklet contains three sayings from the "Vadan" (Aphorisms 308, 315, 316), some parts or different versions of the Unpublished Sayings (see under Part Two of this book) and a few different versions of previously included Aphorisms (Aphorisms 296, 336, and 346) . In the first edition of this book, it was requested that those familiar with the lectures of Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan and the books in which they have been published undertake to trace the origins of the Aphorisms . One correspondent found the origin of a few Aphorisms in the books "Character Building" and "The Soul Whence and Whither?" Since the lectures from which these books were made have now been published as originally spoken in The Complete Works of Pir-o-Murshid Hazrat Inayat Khan , 1923 II-,a comparison of the Aphorisms with the extensive index in that volume allowed the identification of the sources of a considerable number of Aphorisms . A more careful and extensive comparison will no doubt yield the origin of many more, and as the publication of the Complete Works continues it should be possible eventually to find the origin of virtually every Aphorism . Since that process is far from complete, in this edition we are adding to this Introduction a list of the origins identified to date, all from the Summer School in Suresnes in 1923 . In .a later edition, when the identification of sources is more complete, we will include a full comparison of the original words with the published version, as we have done with "The Bowl of Saki" .
Meanwhile, we would like to urge those interested to continue this work of finding the origins, and to communicate their findings to the archives in Suresnes (see end of Preface for the address) .
Origins of Aphorisms : The number of the Aphorism is on the left, followed by the title and date (all 1923) of the lecture or class from which it was 215
21 6 taken and the page number on which the origin appears in The Complete Works of Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan , 1923 II, JulyDecember, London and The Hague, 1988 .
19, 20, 21 .
: "God Ideal", 23 July, p . 182 .
22 .
Questions and Answers, 14 July, p . 110 .
23 .
Questions and Answers, 14 July, p . 111 .
27 .
"Tasawwuf", 18 July, p . 140 .
31,
32, 33 .
"Tasawwuf", 20 July, p . 156 .
:
38 .
"Metaphysics . Mind", 11 July, p . 87 .
39 .
"Metaphysics . Mind", 11 July, p . 87-8 .
48 .
Questions and Answers, 14 July, p . 110 .
50 .
"Tasawwuf . The Soul towards Manifestation" , 10 August, p . 335 .
52,
"The Soul towards the Goal", 10 September, p . 627 .
53 .
55 .
"The Soul towards the Goal", 11 September, p . 635 .
59 .
"Conventionality", 21 July, p . 163 .
60 .
"Conventionality", 21 July, p . 164 .
62 .
"Tasawwuf", 23 July, p . 177 .
63,
64, 65 .
:
"Tasawwuf", 23 July, p . 178 .
66 .
"The Spiritual Hierarchy", 24 July, p . 189 .
70 .
"The Spiritual Hierarchy", 24 July, p . 190 .
77,
78 .
"Character Building", 20 August, p . 420 .
79,
80 .
"Tasawwuf . The Soul towards Manifestation" , 18 August, p . 415 .
81 .
82,
"The Soul towards Manifestation", 20 August , p . 42 9 83 .
"The Soul towards Manifestation", 20 August , p . 430 .
88 .
"Tasawwuf . The Soul towards Manifestation" , 18 August, p . 414 .
93 .
Question Class, 8 August, p . 324 .
96 .
"Character Building", 11 August, p . 341 .
98, 100 .
99 .
"There is a custom . . .", 10 August, p . 332 . "The Character Building", 13 August, p . 356 . 216
2 16 A 101 .
"Character Building",
102 .
"The Character Buildi ng",
109 .
"The God Ideal . God,
11
the
August, p . 13 August, Infinite",
343 . p . 352 . 7 August ,
p . 314 . 127 .
"The God Ideal . The S elf and the Mer it of God" , 28 July, p . 233 .
128 .
"God Ideal", 25 July,
173 .
"The Prophet . What Is Asked of a Prophet, " 7 August, p . 307 .
175,
176 .
p.
"The Message", 6 Augu st,
212 .
p . 295 .
177 .
Question Class, 8 Aug ust,
178 .
"The God Ideal . God, p . 309 .
the
Infinite",
7 August ,
179 .
"The God Ideal . God, p . 310 .
the
Infinite",
7 August ,
180 .
"The God Ideal . God, p . 311 .
the
Infinite",
7 August ,
183 .
"Character Building",
18 August, p .
402 .
184 .
"Character Building",
18 August, p .
405 .
185 .
"Character Building",
18 August, p .
404 .
186 .
"Character Building",
18 August, p .
406 .
187 .
"Character Building",
11
August, p .
341 .
188 .
"Character Building".,
18 August, p .
402 .
"Character Building",
11
August, p .
341 .
191 .
"Character Building",
14 August, p .
367 .
193 .
"The Character Buildi ng",
189,
195,
190 .
196 .
p . 322 .
13 August,
p . 356 .
"Character Building",
20 August, p .
420 .
"Character Building",
20 August, p .
421 .
"Character Building",
17 August, p .
391 .
221 .
"Character Building",
20 August, p .
424 .
230 .
"The Soul's Manifesta tion", 6 Septem ber, p . 586 .
197 . 199,
200 .
216A
21 7
A P H O R I S M S
1 . Illusion is the cover of things : reality is the depth of things . The body is the illusion ; the soul is the reality . The flower is the illusion : the fragrance is the reality . The fragrance is the spirit of the flower ; it persists . 2 . Man is not made by God as the wood is cut by the carpenter ; for the carpenter and the wood are different, while God and man are the same . Man is made of the substance of God : man is in God : and all that is in God, is in man .
3 . Belief cannot be taught : it cannot be learned ; it is the grace of God . To affirm a belief is one thing ; to realise belief is another .
4 . The aim of the mystic is to stretch his range of consciousness as widely as possible, so that he may touch the highest pride and the deepest humility . The only fall for a mystic is to fall beneath the level of his ideal .
5 . A man who has no imagination, stands on the earth ; he has no wings : he cannot fly .
6.
When we are face to face with Truth, the point of view of Krishna, Buddha, Christ, or any other Prophet, is the same . When we look at life from the too of the mountain, there is no limitation : there is the same immensity .
7 . To every question that arises in the heart of the mystic, he finds the answer in the life before him .
8 . The false shows itself ; all that is true proves itself . 9 . That which is not beautiful in its effect, cannot be real beauty .
10 . It is those who have touched the Inner Beauty, who are able to appreciate beauty in all its forms .
11 . The Beauty which the knower knows and the lover appreciates, the mystic worships .
12 . The difference between Spirit and soul is like that of -the- 217
218 the sun and the ray . The ray is the ray of the sun, but at the same time the sun is the sun, and the ray is the ray . 13 . God is the essense of beauty ; it is His love of beauty, which has caused Him to express His own beauty in Manifestation .
14 . Beauty is God's desire fulfilled in the objective world .
15 . Beauty is the depth of the soul ; its expression in whatever form is the sign of the soul's unfoldment . 16 . When an individual becomes a person, the beauty hidden in the individual, which is divine, develops : and that development of beauty is personality . 17 . Beauty is hidden in every soul, however wicked ; and our trust and confidence in the beauty of the soul helps to draw out that hidden beauty, which must shine out one day . 18 . Most unbelievers have a very near horizon, like birds in a covered cage, who do not know that there is anything beyond .
19 . The wonderful thing is that the soul already knows to some extent that there is something behind the veil, the veil of perplexity : that there is something to be sought for in the highest spheres of life : that there is some beauty to be seen : that there is some One to be known, Who is knowable .
20 . This desire, this longing is not acquired ; it is a dim knowledge of the soul, which it has in itself . Therefore, disbelief in God is nothing but a condition brought about by the vapours arising from this material life and covering, as clouds, the Light of the soul which is its life . 21 . If this world offers to a person all it possesses, even then the soul is not satisfied , because its satisfaction is in its higher aspiration ; and it is this higher aspiration which leads to God . 22 . If the mind did not stand as a hindrance to the intuition, every person would be intuitive, for intuition is more natural and more easy than the reasoning of the mind . 23 . What comes from without is not intuition ; intuition is something which rises from one's own heart and brings a sense of satisfaction, of ease and happiness . 24 . The life of man, however great and spiritual, has its 218 -limitations-
limitations .
219 Before the conditions of life the greatest ma n
on earth, the most powerful soul, will for a moment seem helpless ; but it is not the beginning which counts : it is the end . 25 . It is the last note that a great soul strikes which vroves that soul to be real and true .
26 . There can be no better sign of spiritual development than control over passion and anger . If one can control these, one can control life . 27 . The secret of seeking the will of God is in cultivating the faculty of sensing harmony ; for harmony is beauty and beauty is harmony, and the lover of beauty in his further progress becomes the seeker for harmony ; and by trying always to maintain harmony, man will tune his heart to the will of God .
28 . If it were not for pain, one would not enjoy the experience of joy . It is pain which helps one to experience joy, for everything is distinguished by its opposite .
29 . If it were not for pain, life would be most uninteresting, for it is by pain that the heart is penetrated . 30 . Since the nature of life is action and reaction, every outer experience has a reaction within and every inner experience has its reaction in the outer life . 31 . In the spheres of conscience the soul of man and the Spirit of God meet and become one . 32 . To a soul which is wide-awake , the Judgment Day does not come after death . For that soul, every day is a Judgment Day .
33 . Every step forward gives a certain amount of freedom of action, and, as one goes further and further in the oath of Truth, the freedom is greater at every step .
34 . The more one regards harmony one can create .
the feelingsof others, the more
35 . The heart in its depth is linked up with the Divine Mind : so in the depth of the heart there is greater justice than on the surface .
36 . Inspiration comes when knowledge and the Inner Light, falling on one's own conception of things, come together in Himsel f the conscience , which is the Court of God, where He -sits- 219
220 sits on the throne of Justice .
37 . Happiness is our birthright : in our happiness is the happiness of God .
38 . Thought has its birth and death as a living being, and the life of a thought is incomparably longer than that of a living being in the physical body .
39 . The mind is a world, a world that man makes - in which he will make his life in the hereafter, as a spider lives in the web it has woven . Cf . Aph . 296 .
40 . To what does the love of God lead? It leads to that peace and stillness which can be seen in the life of the tree, which flowers and bears fruit for others and expects no return .
41 . Verily he who pursues the world, will inherit the world ; but the soul who pursues God, will attain in the end to the presence of God .
42 . A material person has a silent craving in his heart to probe the death of the spiritual ideal which he disowns .
43 . There is nothing in this world which does not speak . Every thing and every being is continually calling out its nature, its character, and its secret : and the more the inner sense is open, the more capable it becomes of hearing the voice of all things .
44 . When once the inner sense has broken the walls around it, it breathes the freedom and happiness which is the soul's own property and which the soul then attains .
45 . The sign of the enlightened soul is readiness to understand .
46 . The soul comes to a stage of realization where the whole of life becomes to him one sublime vision of the immanence of God .
47 . The brain may be said to be the seat of the Intelligence, and the heart to be the throne of wisdom .
48 . Wisdom may be called spiritual knowledge . 220
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49 . The real place where the Heavens are made, is within man . 50 . The soul is the ray of the Sun, which is the infinite Spirit . 51 . The soul is the action of the heavenly Sun . It manifests and returns , as man exhales and inhales . 52 . God is Love : so God is beyond the Law . Love is above the Law .
If we come to any solution of our everrising questions, it is never by studying the Law that we find satisfaction, but by diving deep into Love, and letting Love inspire us .
53 .
Cf . Aph . 346 .
54 . If one has learned while on earth how to create joy and happiness for oneself .and others, in the other world that joy and happiness surround one : and if one has sown the seeds of poison , one must reap those fruits there : and thus one sees that justice is the nature of life .
55 . The Judgment Day is every day, and one knows it as one's sight becomes more keen . Every hour, every moment in life has its judgment .
56 . What connection has the soul, which has passed from the Earth, with those still on this plane? The connection of the heart still keeps intact, and it remains unbroken as long as the link of sympathy is there . 57 . To create happiness for oneself and others is the whole philosophy of religion .
58 . What is Sufism? It is wisdom . To learn wisdom, at every step on the path of life, is the only work of the Sufi .
59 . The one who is the slave of conventionality, is a captive ; the one who is the master of conventionality, is the possessor of that kingdom which is mentioned in the Bible : "Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the kingdom of the Earth . "
60 . As soon as a person begins to regard the pleasure and displeasure of God in the feelings of every person he meets, he can only be refined, whatever his position in life .
61 . The human soul is by nature perfect , but the life of limitation on Earth brings imperfection to it . 221
222
62 . The sense of Shame is a channel which leads to that Goal which is called Perfection . 63 . Beauty, in all its aspects, is beyond pr_ce . 64 . Often the sense of shame works like a sharp knife upon a feeling heart, but it only makes it like a cut diamond : for by it we come to the realization that what is most precious in life, is feeling .
65 . The heights of every civilisation show the fineness of human feeling, which is the highest of all aspects of culture .
66 . What the moon seems to give as light, is not its own ; it is the light of the sun . So it is with the divine Messengers of all times .
67 . When a soul arrives at its full bloom, it begins to show the colour and spread the fragrance of the Divine Spirit of God .
68 . The one who does not seek God, has, in the end of the journey of illusion, a great disappointment ; for, throughout his whole journey, he has not found the perfection of Love, Beauty, and Goodness on the Earth ; and he does not believe in, or expect to find, such an ideal in Heaven . 69 . Every soul seeks for happiness, and, after running after all the objects which for the moment seem to give happiness, finds out that nowhere is there perfect happiness except in God .
70 . All souls in the world are receptacles of the Message of God ; not only human beings, but even the lower creation convey the Message of the one and only Being . = also Aph . 122 . 71 . No sooner has the heart become living, than the law of Justice manifests .
72 . God is noth Judge and Forgiver . He forgives even more than He judges ; for justice comes from His intelligence, but forgiveness comes from His Divine Love .
73 . When God's Divine Love rises as a wave, it washes away the sins of the whole life in a moment, for Law has no power to stand before Love : the stream of Love sweeps it away . 222
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74 . The very thought of the love of God fills the heart with joy and makes it light of its burden . 75 . The kingship of God manifests in the blossoming of every soul . 76 . The finest things are to be felt : words cannot express them . Noise only spoils their beauty and robs them of preciousness . 77 . The attitude of looking at everything with a smile is the sign of the saintly soul .
78 . As the sunshine from without lightens the whole world, so the sunshine from within , if it were raised , would illuminate the whole life, in spite of all seeming wrongs and all limitations .
79 . Fear is a shadow cast upon the light of the soul : the shadow of something the soul does not know, which is strange to the soul .
80 . Fear comes from ignorance . For instance, the soul is frightened on entering the body of matter : and the soul does not know death, and so it is afraid . 81 . The illuminated soul finds both within and without .
its way through darkness,
82 . In spite of all his limitation, a wonderful power is hidden in man's soul . What makes man helpless, is ignorance of his free-will . Free-will is the basis of the whole life .
83 . Free-will is the mighty power, the God-power, hidden in man, and it is ignorance which keeps man from his divine heritage .
84 . Many seem wide-awake to the life without, but asleep to the life within ; and, though the chamber of the heart is continually visited by the hosts of Heaven, they do not know their heart, for they are not there .
85 . Man can only be really happy when he connects his soul with the spheres of Heaven .
86 . The more closely a person is drawn to Heaven, the more the things of Earth lose their colour and taste . 223
224 87 . The religions have always taught self-denial ; but the soul which naturally rises to Heaven, does not need to practise renunciation . 88 . The mo ment the soul compares its own limitation with the perfection of God, it has begun to progress . 89 . At the cost of the happiness of Heaven, the soul comes to the great fulfilment of life, which even angels are not blessed with : for manifestation in human form is the utmost boundary of manifestation, the furthest that any soul can go .
90 . Every difficulty in life is owing to man's limitation, which covers the divine spark in him until in time it becomes obscured from his view, and this culminates in the tragedy of life .
91 . Not only human beings , but animals, birds, insects, trees and plants all have a spiritual attainment . No creature that has ever been on earth will be deprived entirely of spiritual bliss .
92 . There is nothing in this world without purpose, and, though the place of one in the scheme of life may seem different from that of another, yet, in the sum total of things, we and the lower creation, together with the dji.nns and angels, have our purpose, and that purpose is the realization of Truth ; and it comes to all in the form of bliss .
93 . Wisdom is Love, and Love is true Wisdom . The coldhearted man is never wise, and the truly warm-hearted person is never foolish , for love comes from Wisdom and wisdom from love .
94 . One must not make even principles so set that one cannot break them .
95 . Every soul inclined to serve has a scope for service on every plane ; and the one who is able to serve here, is able to serve on the higher planes even more . 96 . Self-pity is the worst poverty . When a person says , "I am to be pitied" - before he says anything more, he has diminished, by half, what he is : and what is said further, diminishes him totally .
97 . Out of the heart that is happy, springs a fountain that pours water from above and in time brings flowers and fruits . 224
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98 . A person need not be unworldly in order to become spiritual . We may live in the world and yet not be of the world . 99 . Spirituality is in no way a hindrance to worldly progress . A worldly success, gained through the power of spirituality, has a stronger foundation .
100 . Virtue, forced upon oneself or another, is not a virtue ; it loses its beauty . There must be willingness - virtue must not be forced .
101 . The true Ego does not know sorrow ; its true being is happiness, for the real Ego is God and God is Happiness .
102 . Once a soul has awakened to the continual music of life, that soul will consider it as his responsibility, his duty, to play his part in the outer life, even if it be contrary to his inner condition at the moment .
103 . The knowers of Truth close their lips, for they cannot say one thing or another from the point of view of Absolute Truth .
104 . There are many names for the seas and rivers and streams, but they all contain water - and there are various names for religion, but they all contain the same Truth, spoken in different forms at different times .
105 . It is the love element developing in the animals, which brings them together in flocks and herds .
106 . We must not observe a principle only, but we must consult our own ideals in everything we do .
107 . I think the knower of the Truth will find truth in the symbols of the Roman Catholic Church, and will find the same truth in the absence of symbols in the Protestant Church .
108 . If the soul were awakened to feel what the birds feel when singing in the forest at dawn, man would know that their prayer is even more exalting than his own, for it is more natural . 109 . Trees are more holy and spiritual than some men . Their purpose is to give some contribution to life, and they are continually busy fulfilling their purpose . They feel that joy and satisfaction which man cannot feel until he attains to their stage of stillness and peace . 225
226 110 . Where there is form, there is shadow - so, where there is human love, there is jealousy . 111 . Tolerance is the sign of an evolved soup . A soul gives the proof of its evolution in the degree of tolerance it shows .
112 . Death does not belong to the soul - so it does not belong to the person . Death comes to what the person knows : not to the person himself .
113 . There is no scripture in which contradiction does not exist . It is the contradiction which makes the music of the Message .
114 . None of the Great Ones have called themselves Masters, nor have they ever considered themselves to be so . What they have known in their lives, is their privilege in opening their heart wider and wider to reflect the Light of The Master, who is God Himself .
115 . For all faces are His faces , and from all lips it is His word that comes . But those who can respond to Him, they become as His appointed servants .
116 . God has chosen all, for all souls the Creator .
are near and dear to
117 . The greater a person is in spiritual advancement, the more unassuming he becomes .
118 . The Great Ones are initiated by God Himself, and they prove their initiations, not by their claims, but in their works .
119 . Everything has its purpose, but knowledge of the purpose makes us able to use it to the best advantage .
120 . Beauty is created out of variety .
121 . Truth is the heritage of Man - the human soul, whether in the East or west, possesses the Truth . 122 . All souls in the world are receptacles of the Message of God, and not only the human beings but even the lower creation, all objects and all conditions, convey to us the Message of the One and Only Being . = also Aph . 70 . 226
22 7 123 . There is nothing in the world which is not the instrument of God .
124 . Evil and ugliness are in man's limited conception . In God's great Being they have no existence .
125 . Evil is only the shadow of goodness . As the shadow is non-existent, so is evil .
126 . It is the knowledge of the purpose of life which gives man the strength with which he stands in the midst of the opposing forces of life .
127 . God knows Himself by His manifestation . Manifestation is the self of God, but a self which is limited - a self which makes Him know that He is perfect, when He compares His own Being with this limited self which we call Nature . Therefore, the purpose of the whole creation is the realization that God Himself gains by discovering His own Perfection through His manifestation .
128 . Merit is not creative . Merit is something which is possessed . Therefore attributes are not impo rtant - the importance is in the possessor of the attribute .
129 . We are too limited to see the justice of the Perfect One .
130 . We often suffer because we do not understand . Understanding is a great thing - once we understand, we can tolerate .
131 . The soul of every individual is God ; but man has a mind and a body, which contain God according to his accommodation .
132 . The water of the ocean is ever pure, in spite of all that may be thrown into it . So the Pure One consumes all impurities, and turns them into purity .
133 . The soul is the Divine Breath . It purifies, re-vivifies, and heals the instrument through which it functions .
134 . The soul is on a continual journey . On whatever plane, it journeys all the time, and on this journey it has a puroose to accomplish .
135 . Nothing that the human heart has once desired, remains unfulfilled . If it is not fulfilled here, it is accom-olished- 227
228
plashed in the hereafter .
136 . The desire of the soul is the wish of God .
137 . The Source of the soul is perfect, and so is the Goal . 138 . No soul perishes - the soul was not born to perish .
139 . The one who loves fairness , blows the spark of justice to a flame , in the light of which life becomes clear to him .
140 . The one who judges himself, learns justice - not he who is occupied in judging others .
141 . There comes a stage in life, the stage of life's culmination , when man has nothing to say against any one, unless it be against himself ; and it is from this point that he begins to see the Divine Justice hidden behind Manifestation .
142 . The wise see in every form the Divine Form - in every heart they see the Divine Light shining .
143 . When we judge others, we are certainly judging the Artist Who has created them . If we realized this, it would not be difficult to feel the presence of God everywhere .
144 . When we go more deeply into the Phenomena of life, we shall come to a place where the whole nature of Being will unveil itself, and we shall be able to say : "There is nothing but God . "
145 . Noisiness comes from restlessness, and restlessness is the destructive rhythm .
146 . Those who have made any success in life, in whatever direction, it is by their quiet working .
147 . Enthusiasm is a great thing in life : it is creative ; but too much of it sometimes spoils things .
148 . When one devotes one's time and thought to trying to know what one need not know, one loses the opportunity which life offers of discovering the nature and secret of the soul, in which lies the fulfilment of the purpose of life . 228
22 9 149 . Life's mysteries apart, the less words used in the little things of everyday life, the more profitable it is .
150 . People think that many words express things better . They do not know that most often so many words spoken are so many veils wrapped around the idea .
151 . He who holds himself close to Heaven, he is guided from Heaven .
152 . He who disconnects himself from the heavenly spheres, is like the broken fruit fallen from the tree .
153 . He who clings to the light from Heaven, has a light to warn and guard him at every step, according to his desire for guidance .
154 . The angelic souls who are in direct touch with the Spirit of God, and who have no knowledge of the false world which is full of illusion - who live and know not death, whose lives are happiness, whose food is divine light make around the Divine Spirit an aura which is called the highest Heaven .
155 . Death is the unveiling of a cover, after which many things will be known to the soul, which have been hitherto hidden in regard to its own life and in regard to the whole world .
156 . Innocence is the natural condition of the soul, and the lack of innocence is a foreign element which the soul acquires after coming upon earth .
157 . Death, for the spiritual souls, is only a gate through which they enter into that sphere which every soul knows to be its home .
158 . Souls which have become conscious spheres , even in the smallest degree that sphere, and the discomfort they that of home-sickness which the call spheres gives .
,
of the angelic hear the calling of have in this world is of the angelic
159 . Intelligence is the Light of Life, the Life of Life, and the Essence of the whole Being .
160 . Rhythm cannot exist without tone, nor tone without rhythm . They are interdependent for their existence, and it is the same with time and space . 229
230 161 . The mystic contemplates upon the Being of God, and so raises his consciousness above the limitations of time and space, and liberates his soul by lifting it to the divine spheres .
162 . The blessing of life is in the consciousness of the blessing .
163 . Man will find, in the end of his search on the spiritual line, that all beings, including trees and plants, rocks and mountains, oceans and rivers, all are prayerful - and all attain to that spiritual summit which is the real longing of all souls .
164 . Only when man learns to serve and do his duty without the thought of appreciation - only then will he attain .
165 . That self-denial cannot be a virtue, which comes as a result of helplessness and culminates in dissatisfaction .
166 . The soul's happiness is in itself - nothing the soul fully happy but self-realization .
can make
167 . The life which everyone knows, is this momentary period of the soul's captivity .
168 . Spirit is matter and matter is spirit . The denseness of spirit is matter, and the fineness of matter is spirit .
169 . According to the width of his motive, man's vision is wide ; and according to the cower of his motive, man's strength is great .
170 . Such souls as are conscious of their relation to God as that between a child and his parents, are especially cared for . They are always guided, because they ask for guidance .
171 . There is nothing in this world which is void of form, except God, Who is formless .
172 . The limitless God cannot be made intelligible to the limited self, unless He is first made limited . That limited ideal becomes as an instrument, as a medium of God Who is perfect and Who is limitless .
173 . What is religion? In the outer sense of the word, a form given for the worship of God, a law given to the community that it may live harmoniously . And what doe s 230 -religion-
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religion mean in the inner sense of the word? It means a staircase made for the soul to climb to reach that plane where Truth is realized : 174 . Many do good - but how few do it wisely! To do good wisely is the work of the Sage .
175 . The one who lives in his mind, is conscious of the mind ; the one who lives in his soul, is conscious of the soul .
176 . Truth is unlimited and incomparable - therefore Truth alone knows, enjoys, and realizes its own existence .
177 . The soul is Light, the mind is Light, and the body is Light - Light of different grades - and it is this relation which connects man with the planets and stars .
178 . The Infinite God is the Self of God ; and all that has manifested under name and form, is the outward aspect of God .
179 . All met who join in prayers, may not be so sincere as the birds in the forest, for not one among them says its prayers without sincerity .
180 . Spirituality is attained by all beings - not only by man, but by beasts and birds, for they each have their religion, their principles, their law and their morals .
181 . The pride that says, "I am so spiritual", is not spiritual pride ; it is earthly pride : for where there is spirituality, there is no proud claim .
182 . Spiritual realization can be attained in one moment in rare cases, but generally a considerable time of preparation is needed .
183 . Fineness of nature
184 . Fineness
is the sign of the intelligent .
can be acquired by love of refinement .
185 . In the heart of man the whole universe is reflected : and, as the whole universe is reflected in it , man may be called the heart of the universe .
186 . Subtlety produces Beauty . It is Subtlety which is the Curl of the Beloved . 231
232 187 . In order to acquire spiritual knowledge, in order to receive inspiration, in order to prepare one's heart for the inner revelation, one must try to make one's mentality pliable - like water, rather than a rock . 188 . Once peace is made within , one will have gained sufficient strength and power to use in the struggle of life, within and without .
189 . Life is a continual battle . Man's constant struggle with things outside gives a chance to the foes who exist in his own being .
190 . The first thing necessary is to make peace for the time being with the outside world, in order to prepare for the warfare which is to be fought within .
191 . The one who is able to keep his equilibrium without being annoyed, without being troubled, gains that mastery which is needed in the evolution of life .
192 . The heart, when it is not living and making its life a life of love, feels out of place ; and all the discomfort of life comes from this .
193 . Nothing, however good it appears , is a virtue unless it is willingly done - because , in the willingness of making even a sacrifice , one experiences the breath of freedom .
194 . When a person is absorbed in self, he has no time to build his character ; but when he forgets himself, he collects all that is good and beautiful . This is the key to the whole life - to worldly success and to spiritual attainment .
195 . God is happiness, the soul is happiness, and spirituality is happiness . So there is no place for sadness in the kingdom of God .
196 . That which deprives man of happiness, deprives him of God .
197 . The light - which comes from the soul, rises through the heart, and manifests outwardly in man's smile - is indeed the Light from Heaven . In that Light many flowers frow and many fruits become ripe .
198 . We help God to forgive us by forgiving ourselves .
232
233 199 . He who realises the relation of friendship between on e soul and another - the tenderness , delicacy, and sacredness of this relationship - he is living, and in this manner he will one day communicate with God .
200 . The same bridge , which connects two souls when stretched becomes the path to God .
in the world,
201 . Nirvana is as a star in our hearts, which we develop ; and as we develop it, it becomes brilliant : and its brilliance consumes all the wrong of life until nothing is left but that purity which is the Divine Light .
202 . It must be remembered as the first principle of life, that manifestation was destined for keener observation of life within and without .
203 . The soul is happy by nature : the soul is happiness itself . It becomes unhappy when something is the matter with its vehicle, its instrument, its tool - through which it experiences life . Care of the body, therefore, is the first and the most important principle of religion .
204 . The purpose of .the whole creation is fulfilled in the attainment of that perfection which is for a human being to attain . The saints, seers, sages, prophets, and Masters of humanity have all been human beings : and they have shown divine perfection in fulfilling the purpose of being human .
205 . The teaching of Jesus Christ has, as its central theme, unfoldment towards a realization of immortality .
206 . Vanity, in its proper place, is a great virtue . When not in its proper place, it is a great sin .
207 . Every person has his life designed beforehand ; and the purpose that he is born to accomplish in life - the light of that purpose has already been kindled in his soul .
208 . Is not man the creator of sin? If he creates it, he can destroy it also . And if he cannot destroy it, his elder brother can .
209 . The impression of sin, in metaphysical terms, may be called an illness - a mental illness, not physical . And, as the doctor is able to cure physical illness, so the doctor of the soul is able to heal spiritually .
210 . In reality, no sin, no virtue can be engraved upon the -soul- 233
234 soul - it can cover the soul . The soul is, in its essence, Divine Intelligence ; and how can Divine Intelligence be impressed with either virtue or sin ?
211 . When the object, the purpose for which a scul is born upon Earth, is fulfilled - then there is nothing to hold it ; and the soul is naturally drawn back to its source and Goal .
212 . God Himself sees through the eye of man - s :) the eye is a road between man and God . 213 . Man has neither been created to be as spiritual as an angel, nor has he been made to be as material as an animal ; and when he strikes the happy medium, he will certainly tread the path which leads straight to the Goal .
214 . Man by nature is good . Goodness is his real self : badness is only a cloud . But clouds are ever floating they are sometimes here and sometimes there - and if we trust in the goodness of man, the clouds will disappear . Our very trust will disperse them .
215 . The sun shines on all the trees ; it does not make distinctions between this tree and that, but in accordance with their absorption of the light falling upon them and according to the response they give to the sun, they receive its light .
216 . Remember, that very often a disciple is an inspiration for the Master ; because it is not the Master who teaches - it is God Himself .
217 . The Master is only the medium ; and, as high as is the response of the disciple, so strongly does it attract the message of God .
218 . The further we go, so the more our disputes and arguments cease . They fade away until there is no colour left in them ; and when all the colour has gone, the white light comes which is the Light of God .
219 . The one who serves, of serving God .
however humbly, has the privilege
220 . Cheerfulness is life : death repulses .
sadness is death . Life attracts :
221 . Do not let your own mind be impressed by the depression of your friend . If you do, you will have taken the germ of -his234
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his disease . 222 . It is harmony, established with everyone one meets in life, which tunes one's soul with the Infinite .
223 . The man conscious of his duties and obligations to his friends is more righteous than he who sits alone in the solitude .
224 . The condition of God and His true lover is that either the Beloved lives or the lover - not both .
225 . Whether a person feels attracted to God now or not, there will come a day when he will be attracted ; for every soul has to return to God .
226 . Ignorance of the self gives the fear of death . The more one learns of the true self, the less one fears death ; for it is only a door through which one passes from one phase of life to another - and the other phase is much better .
227 . Humour is the sign of Light from above . When that Light touches the mind, it tickles it : and it is the tickling of the mind that produces humour .
228 . Renunciation is not something which we must torture ourselves to learn . It is in us, but it is buried, and it can only be dug up by our love .
229 . When the sun is clouded, the light does not reach the Earth - so with the soul, which is divine and full of light . If it is covered thickly with clouds, then man does not receive the light which is in the soul itself .
230 . What is rooted out in the quest of Truth, is ignorance . When it is entirely removed from his heart, man's outlook becomes wide - as wide as the eye of God .
231 . Man meets with hardships in life - sometimes they seem too hard for him to stand . But often such experiences become as higher initiations in the life of the traveller on the Path .
232 . Sadness comes from limitation - limitation in different forms - from lack of perception, lack of power over oneself and over conditions, and from lack of that substance which is happiness itself : which is Love .
235
236 233 . The nature of Love is as the nature of water in the depth of the earth . If one does not dig deep enough, he finds mud not water ; but when he digs deep, he finds pure water .
234 . If there is any death , it is stillness and inactivity ; and then the impulse of life comes , which breaks through the cloud of mortality and makes the soul see the daylight after the darkness of the night . And what does the soul see in this bright daylight ? It sees itself living as before, having the same name and form and yet .progressing .
235 . Every soul is striving to attain God - God not as a Judge or as a King, but as a Beloved . And every soul seeks God, the God of Love, in the form which it is capable of imagining .
236 . The soul manifests in the world in order that it may experience the different phases of manifestation : and yet not lose its way, but regain its original freedom in addition to the experience and knowledge it has gained in this world .
237 . In order to be, nothing .
one must pass through a stage of being
238 . When Illumination comes, it seems to bring annihila- . tion : but it is not annihilation - it is, in reality, exaltation .
239 . Happiness cannot come by merely believing in God . Believing is a process . By this process the God within is awakened and made living ; it is the living in God, which gives happiness .
240 . It is not only the link of love and sympathy, but the belief in the hereafter to the extent of conviction, that lifts those on earth to know about their beloved ones who have passed over to the other side .
241 . The soul 's sustenance is the knowledge of God . It is by this knowledge that the soul lives the eternal life .
242 . Man has the key of life in his own hands, if he only knew it .
243 . Man is always journeying towards the Truth . He is seeking, seeking - for in his heart is the love of that which is REAL .
244 . There is no such thing as mortality, except the illu236 -sion-
237 sion - and the impression of that illusion which ma n keeps before his eyes as fear during his life-time, and still as an impression after he has passed from this earth . Cf . Aph . 336 .
245 . The soul is life - it never touches death . its illusion .
Death is
246 . To the one who realizes ultimate Truth, time and space are of little importance ; he rises above them .
247 . The further one goes on the spiritual path, the more one will have to learn to play a part .
248 . The spiritual man learns to answer the question of every soul at its own plane of evolution .
249 . It is the ignorant soul, ignorant of his source and goal, who dreads leaving the sphere to which he has become attached . It is the soul who knows not what is beyond, who is afraid to be lifted up above the ground his feet are touching .
250 . One's duty is to do now what can be done now . Nothing that one really values , does one put off till to- mo rrow . 251 . Souls, when they start from the angelic heavens, are vibrations . They have no earthly harps ; they are the harps themselves .
252 . There cannot be perfection where alone is perfect .
there is duality . God
253 . The whole interest in life is in journeying towards perfection . If man were born perfect, there would be no joy in life .
254 . In order to attain to God-consciousness, the first condition is to make God a reality so that He is no longer only an imagination .
255 . The soul who develops his personality, is like the fine flower with its colour, fragrance, and delicacy .
256 . The essence of spirituality and mysticism is readiness to serve the Person next to us .
257 . The question : "What is the our o_ose of manifestation?" -may- 237
238 may be answered in one word - Satisfaction, (for the satisfaction of God) .
258 . Nothing in the world could give man the strength that is needed to live a life on the Earth, if there were no blessing from Heaven reaching him from time to time and of which he is so little aware .
259 . The work of the spiritual man is to forget his false self and to realize the true self, which is Gad : and to realize this true self in his brother also .
260 . It is not true that Adam was put out of the Garden of Eden . He only turned his back upon it ; and so he became an exile from Heaven .
261 . Every soul is born with the capacity by which it can draw all the spiritual bliss and ecstasy which is needed for its evolution .
262 . Every thing and being is placed in its own place, and each is busy carrying out the work which has to be done in the whole scheme of Nature .
263 . Nirvana is not an intellectual realization ; it is Life .
264 . There are blessed souls living on the earth to-day to whom sacrifice gives no pain but only pleasure . In seeing another eat, their hunger is satisfied : renunciation is to them a joy ; for they have gone through the cross and risen above it .
265 . The better the instrument, the greater the satisfaction of the soul .
266 . Truth cannot be out into words . It must be seen in the light of our own intuition .
267 . That cannot be Truth which is acauired . The Truth is that which is discovered .
268 . The art of personality is not a qualification - it is the purpose for which man was created . By this art, man not only satisfies himself, but he pleases God .
269 . When the soul has once fought its battle with the things that make it fear and tremble and shrink, that soul has conquered life and become the master of life . It has inherited the kingdom which is its own . 238
270 . The man who has proved in his life to be the friend 239 of every person he meets, he in the end will prove to b e
the friend of God . 271 . The perfection of friendship, in which there is all spiritual perfection, comes when the soul is so developed that it says : "There is not one whom I cannot bear ." When it has reached that state, it has certainly passed into the ranks of those initiates whose names are written on the spiritual records .
272 . Nature, in its different aspects, is the materialization of that Light which is called the Divine Spirit . 273 . In prayer, the repeating of thanksgiving brings to one's soul'one's own voice, and that voice echoes before the God Who is within . 274 . The angels were made to sing the praises of the Lord : the genii to imagine, to dream, to meditate : but man is created to show humanity in his character . 275 . It is not what Christ taught that makes his devotees love him . They dispute over these things in vain . It is what He Himself was ; it is that, which is loved and admired by them .
276 . Man may have rank and position and a thousand qualifications : he may possess all the goods of the Earth ; but if he lacks the art of personality, he is indeed poor . It is by this art that man shows that nobility which belongs to the kingdom of God .
277 . A person however learned and qualified in his life's work, in whom gratitude is absent, is void of that beauty of character which makes personality fragrant .
278 . Throughout the whole journey on the spiritual path , the main thing that has to be accomplished is the forgetting of the false ego .
279 . True freedom is within oneself . When the soul is free, there is nothing in this world that binds us - everywhere we find freedom, both in Heaven and Earth .
280 . As the heart expands, so the horizon becomes wider, and one finds greater and greater scope in which to build the kingdom of God .
281 . Joy is not something brought from outside : it belongs -to239
240 to us ; but it manifests actions .
to us as the result of certain
282 . Life is an opportunity, and the more one realizes this, the more one will make the best of the opportunity which life offers .
283 . The essence of life is hope . If we hope to be better, we shall become better . 284 . You are love . You come from love . You are made by love . You cannot cease to love .
285 . The whole manifestation is the manifestation of love . God Himself is love . So the love which comes from the Source, returns to the Source - and the purpose of life is accomplished in this .
286 . You may go to the most exalted place : a place blessed with peace and rest ; but if you take sadness and unrest with you, you will find them-there .
287 . God's Message does not come only in words . What comes in words is small compared to the radiance the Message brings to all things and all beings . It comes in the form of a sacrament - as bread and wine . Bread and wine, when symbolically interpreted, mean love and life .
288 . Renounce the good of the world : renounce the good of Heaven : renounce your highest ideal .' Then renounce your renunciation .
289 . The way to perfection is not limited . No one can make a rule that you can only pass by this way and none other .
290 . Beauty is the watchword of the seeker .
291 . Patience is a process through which a soul goes to become precious .
292 . By Self-realization, a man becomes larger than the universe . The world in which he lives, becomes as a drop in the ocean of his heart .
293 . In our sorrow is God's sorrow ; for, if God cannot sympathise, man is greater than God .
Z40
24 1 294 . Part of our sorrow , and our joy, comes from life : part we make for ourselves . Life cannot give us joy if we will not earn it .
295 . The God ideal is the flower of the human race, and this flower blooms in the realization of God .
296 . The mind is a world - a world that man makes : in which he will live in the hereafter as a spider lives in the web it has woven . Cf . Aph . 39 .
297 . The further on the path of life's mystery a person travels, the finer he will have to become, in order to perceive and to express the mystery of life .
298 . The prophetic soul is like a fruit, dropped upon the earth but still connected with the branch . The branch has bent and the fruit has touched the earth, but it has not lost connection with the stem .
299 . The further we advance , our part in the symphony of life becomes more difficult and more important ; and the more conscious we become of this responsibility, the more efficient we become in accomplishing our task .
300 . With all the arguments for and against the divinity of Christ, no sincere believer in God can deny that God reflected Himself through the personality of the Master .
301 . The prophetic soul must , of necessity, rise so high that it can hear the voice of God : and, at the same time, it must bend so low that it can hear the softest whisper of the beings on earth .
302 . Even the presence of the prophet is the answer to every question - without speaking one word, the prophet give s the answer . . . . . The prophet is only the medium between God and man ; therefore, the answer is from God . It is not true that the prophet answers the question, because he reads the mind ; it is the mind of the one who asks the question, that strikes, on the inner plane, the Divine Bell which is the heart of the prophet .
303 . The moment a Person rises above his mind and wakens in the light of the soul, he becomes spiritual .
304 . There are many facts , but only one Truth . The facts can be out into words, but not the Truth .
241
242 305 . The mystic seeks God both within and without ; ognises God both in unity and in variety .
he rec-
306 . As one evolves spiritually, one rises above the tendency to intolerance : for the reason that one begins to see, besides oneself and the second person, God - and so one unites oneself with the other Person in God .
307 . The souls of all are from one and the same Source, but a soul which is unveiled, shines out . Love and light come continually from such souls : you need no proof for it, for it is living - all else is dead in comparison .
308 . It is death that dies, not life .
309 . The soul covers its own truth with a thousand veils from its own eyes .
310 . The ideal must not be turned into the idol .
311 . The soul has not come on Earth to die the death of helplessness nor continually to suffer pain and misery . The purpose of the soul is that for which the whole creation has been busied, and it is the fulfilling of that purpose which is called God-consciousness .
312 .
Evil is an ever-floating thing - sometimes here, sometimes there . . So, evil in man is just a cloud : it comes and goes ; and, if we trust in his goodness , the clouds will disappear .
313 . Man's sacred duty is to strive to attain to that perfect consciousness which is his true religion .
314 . By making many sacrifices and practising renunciation : by going through many tests and trials, man will attain to that consciousness which is God-consciousness - in which resides all perfection .
315 . Balance is the key-note of,soiritual attainment .
316 . No sooner is the God Ideal brought to life, than the worshipper of God turns into Truth .
317 . The depth of every soul is good . It is only belief in this doctrine that gives us reason for our belief in the goodness of God .
242
24 3 318 . The man who shuts himself away from all men, however high spiritually he may be , will not be free in the higher spheres .
319 . In order to fulfill the practical duties of life, it is not necessary to forget our ideal . We can hold the ideal in the tenderest spot of our heart, and yet fulfill our practical duties . The ideal is to illuminate our lives, not to paralyze our actions .
320 . The disciple can inspire, and the disciple can shut . off his inspiration . If there is no response on the part of the disciple, then the inspiration of the Master becomes closed . Just as the clouds cannot give rain when passing over the desert, so, when they come to the forest, the trees attract and the rain falls .
321 . The soul, in manifestation on Earth, is not at all disconnected with the higher spheres . It lives in all spheres , but is conscious generally only on one plane . Thus it becomes deprived of the Heavenly bliss, and conscious of the troubles and limitations of life on the Earth .
322 . NirvAna means "no colour" . What is "colour"? Right or wrong, sin or virtue - all this is "colour" ; and, in the realm of Truth, they fade away as every colour fades in the brightness of Light . He who has realised this, has entered Nirvana .
323 . There are rays and there is Light . If the rays are the source of the souls of living beings, then the light of the Divine Sun is the spirit of the whole of Being .
324 . When we develop our sense of beauty, then we are naturally critical of that which does not come up to our standard . But, when we have passed this stage, in the next cycle divine compassion is developed in our nature and we become able to add all that is lacking, and so to make up for that perfect beauty .
325 . In the making of personality, God finishes His divine art .
326 . As the source and goal of all creation is one, so the source and goal of all religion is one .
327 . The law of God is endless and limitless as God Himself, and, once the eye of the seeker penetrates through the veil that hangs before him, hiding from his eyes the real law of life, the mystery of the whole life manifests to him : and happiness and peace become his own, for they ar e -the- 243
244
the birthright of every soul . 328 . The soul longs for a keen perception . The absence of such fine perception causes depression and confusion, because the inner longing is to see .
329 . There comes a stage in the evolution of an illuminated soul, when he begins to see the law hidden behind Nature . To him, the whole of life reveals its secret .
330 . The wider the outlook, the less are one's troubles in life . If one fixes one's eyes on the horizon as far as one can see , one is saved from troubles and trials .
331 . God is the horizon, and you can neither touch the horizon nor God . The horizon is as far as you can see and even further ; and so is God .
332 . When we find faults and see no excuse, we are blind to the Liaht which can free a person from his faults and give rise to that forgiveness which is the very essence of God - to be found in the human heart .
333 . Life and death, both, are contrary aspects of one thing : and that is change . Death is only passing from life on the Earth to a still greater life .
334 . Wealth such as spiritual wealth, the more you give, the more it increases ; what you have given, you have not lost : you have gained .
335 . What is the soul? The soul is life : it never touches death . Death comes to something which the soul holds, not to itself .
336 . There is no such thing as mortality, except as an illusion : and the impression of that illusion, which man holds as fear . Cf . Aph . 244 .
337 . Every machine must have an engineer , and the engineer must be powerful, controller of his power - not subject to his power . If God is limited , He can no mo re be God .
338 . Can a composer give a justification for every note written in his composition? He cannot ; he can only say : "It is the stream which has risen out of my heart . I am not concerned with every single note . What I am concerned with, is the effect which is produced by my composition . " 244
24 5 339 . Is Law predominant, or Love? Law is the habit : Love is the being . Law is made : Love has existed - it was, it is, and it will be always .
340 . Belief in the human soul is the bridge to belief in God . 341 . By our trust in the divine beauty in every person, we develop that beauty in ourselves .
342 . Worry comes from self-pity . When the self is forgotten, there is no worry . Worry comes also from fear : and fear comes from the clouds of ignorance . Light breaks the clouds .
343 . The soul takes with itself into the hereafter all that it has collected in the way of impressions .
344 . The teaching of the prophets is the answer to the demands of individual and collective souls .
345 . To weigh, to measure, to examine, to express an opinion on a great personality, one must rise to that development first .
346 . If there is any solution to our ever-rising questions, it is never by studying the law that we are satisfied . If anything will give us satisfaction, it is by diving deep into love and letting love inspire us : and that will enable us to see the law . Cf . Aph . 53 .
347 . Verily,
a deep-felt need is a prayer
in itself .
348 . There is no liberation unless one has an ideal before one . The ideal is a stepping - stone towards that attainment which is called liberation .
349 . Love is the shower by which sin is purified - no stain remains . What is God ? God is love . When His mercy, His compassion , His kindness are expressed through a God-realized personality , then the stains of sins, faults, and mistakes are washed away and the soul becomes clear .
350 . Earthly pleasures are the shadows of happiness, because of their transitoriness . True happiness is in love, which is the stream that springs from one's soul : and he who will allow this stream to run continually in all conditions of life, in all situations, however difficult, will have a happiness which truly belongs to him - whose source is not without, but within . 245
246 351 . Failure does not matter in life . To a progressive person, even a thousand failures do not matter . Fe has before his view success : and success is his, even of :er a thousand failures . The greatest pity in life is the standstill when life does not move farther ; a sensible person prefers death to such a life as that .
352 . Verily, Truth is all the Religion there is, and it is Truth which will save . At every step towards the final goal, man will be asked for a sacrifice ; and that sacrifice will be a greater and greater one as he continues on the path . When there is nothing, whether mind, body, thought, feeling, or action, that he keeps back from sacrificing for others - by this man oroves his realization of divine TRUTH .
246
24 7
P A R T F I V E PHRASES .
247
24 9
I 3NTRODUCTION= ~aa~a~=~e ~ TO = PART PART. FIVE .
The following sentences are the phrases given by Inayat Khan to many of his mureeds
to be repeated for their spiri-
tual advancement and to help solve their problems in life .
Each phrase was specifically meant for a certain person, and a desirable attitude of the mureed , the realization of the full meaning of the phrase , the number of repetitions, the emphasis on certain words and the rhythm of the sentence are of great importance for the result . Therefore they were not published before . The main reason for publishing them now is to safeguard them for the future and to pass them on in their authentic form . Furthermore, no doubt, many mureeds may be benefitted by them, as in these phrases also a general meaning can be found . It is, however, pointed out that only when given by an initiator to a mureed a phrase becomes a practice and as such will then attain a deeper meaning . According to the initiator's insight into the psychology of the mureed he will select a certain phrase to be given .
The phrases were taken from Inayat Khan's special notebooks with prescriptions of practices for each one of hi s mureeds .
249
251 The phrasesgiven b Pir-o-Murshid I n ayat Khan to his mureeds . 1 . Let Thy divine blessing flow through any heart to all Thy people in the world . 2 . Bless, Lord, my life with Thy divine blessings . 3 . Providence has blessed me . 4 . Bless my life with every bliss . 5 . May my soul be unfolded, may my heart be at rest, my mind tranquil and my body in good health . God bless me and my dear ones, every moment of life . 6 . Bless my life in every way Lord and illuminate my soul . 7 . Complete my life with blessing . 8 . Complete my life with every blessing . 9 . Providence is blessing me in abundance of all I need . 10 . Bless my life with every blessing . 11 . Providence has blessed me . No fear, all is well . 12 . Bless my home, my life, my soul . 13 . Providence bless me with abundance, abundance, abundance . 14 . Bless, Lord, my life every day and in every way . 15 . Bless me, inspire me and fortify me, Lord, with Thy power and wisdom . 16 . Strengthen me, Lord, and inspire me and bless me, make the best of my life . 17 . Providence has blessed me and is blessing me with abundance, abundance, abundance . 18 . Raise me, Lord, with all the worries and anxieties of life and bless me with Thy divine Providence . 19 . My life is blessed in every way by the divine light . 20 . My mind is balanced, my soul is illuminated, my life is blessed . 21 . Fortify me against the jarring influences and strengthen me in my struggle of life .
Bless me with providence and illuminate me with Thy divine light . 22 . My soul is unfolding every day and my life is blessed in every way . 23 . Bless me, Lord, in every way and unfold my soul . 251
252 24 . Bless, Lord, my life and guide me on the right path . 25 . Bless my body, mind and soul` . 26 . Divine Providence, bless me, inspire me and strengthen my faith . 27 . "Fazal", bless my life from all sides in all things and every way . 28 . "Fazal", bless me in all things through all conditions and'in every way . 29 . "Fazal", bless my life from all sides through all things in every way . 30 . Bless me with light, life, health, happiness, joy and peace, that I may serve Thy divine Cause, wholeheartedly . 31 . Heal my body, inspire my mind, bless my heart and illuminate my soul . 32 . Bless me, Lord, and my dear ones . 33 . My life is unfolding to receive Your blessing, Lord, bless me in every way, guide me on life's path . 34 . "Fazal", better my condition within and without . Bless, bless, bless . 35 . Bless my life and my body, heart and soul . 36 . Inspire me, Lord, to Thy divine wisdom, guide me on the right path and bless my life . 37 . Providence has blessed me to have all I need . 38 . Bless me with all that will enable me to serve Thy divine Cause . 39 . Providence bless and complete my life . 40 . God's blessing is in me and around me . 41 . Kindle my heart with Thy love, God, and bless my life in every way . 42 . Bless my life in every way and from all sides . 43 . Providence bless me through every person I meet and through every condition I go through . 44 . Make my life smooth, harmonious, progressive and fruitful with every blessing . 45 . Inspire my heart, illuminate my soul and bless, God, my .life . 46 . Bless our lives and guide us on life's path . 252
253 47 . God grant all I want . Providence has blessed me .
48 . Bless me amply that I may share my blessing with all . 49 . Providence has blessed me, I have all I need . 50 . Providence has blessed me and supplied all my needs . 51 . Bless my life in every way, God, by Thy love and compassion . 52 . Providence has blessed me, has bestowed upon me all I have and all I need . 53 . Bless me, Lord, at every moment of my life . 54 . Bless, Lord, with Thy Divine perfection . 55 . Bless, Lord, my life and my child and the path which 1)• tread . Note 1) : In Inayat Khan's handwriting, no pronoun was written between 'which' and 'tread' . 56 . Make my life's path easy and bless me, Lord, at al l times . 57 . Surround me and those around me with Thy blessing . 58 . Providence must bless me thousand times over .
59 . I am inspired, I am guided, I am illuminated and I am blessed . 60 . Bless me, inspire me and fortify my faith . 61 . Bless, God, my soul, heal my body, make my life complete . 62 . Providence bless me at every hour, each day, through all I meet and through all conditions I pass through . Abundance, Abundance, Abundance . 63 . Bless me with all that my life needs and my soul longs for . 64 . I receive Thy blessing, God, in every thing, in food, in drink, in sleep and when I am awake . 65 . Bless me a thousand times over and bless me every day more and more . 66 . "Fazal" - Harmony within, without, around and about one . 67 . "Fazal", kindle my heart, lift up my soul and make my body healthy to give my whole life to the service of the Sufi Cause . 68 . "Fazal" - open my heart, unfold my soul, fill me with Thy life and illuminate me with Thy light . 253
254
69 . I hate no one I have grudge against no one I tolerate all 째 I forgive all I love God and all His creation . 70 . God is love and in Him I have my being and I have no fear . 71 . Guide me toward Thy love and light through the right oath .
72 . Balance my life with Thy wisdom and love . 73 . 0 Thou, the perfection of love, harmony and beauty, complete my life in every way . 74 . Fill my heart, Lord, with Thy love, harmony and beauty . 75 . Give me Thy love, teach me Thy harmonious way, show me Thy divine beauty, take me in Thy arms and protect me in Thy enfoldment . 76 . Waken in my heart Thy divine love, Lord, and illuminate my life . 77 . Fill my life with Thy love, light and life . 78 .
Beautify my character and kindle Thy love in my heart, and make my life happy .
79 .
Produce in my life , Lord , love, harmony and beauty . .
80 . May my life become peaceful and harmonious . 81 .
254
Harmonize my soul, Lord, with all people and with all conditions .
82 .
Brighten up my life with Thy light and harmonize my spirit with the peace of Thy divine Being .
83 .
My spirit is productive of divine Harmony . I spread peace and keep balance .
84 .
Harmonize us both and bring happiness in our home .
85 .
Raise my consciousness to Thy harmony and peace .
86 .
Make my home harmonious - mind tranquil - heart at res t - soul illuminated and body at perfect rest .
87 .
May my influence harmonize my self and others and ma y my spiritual ways create harmony .
88 .
Be thoughtful, harmonious and peaceful .
89 .
Make my home harmonious and illuminated . Heart at res t and life happy .
90 .
May health, harmony and happiness come in my life .
255 91 . Let my soul manifest Thy sublime beauty in art . 92 . Let the vision of Thy divine beauty be reflected in my heart and be expressed in my decorative art . 93 .
"Musavir" : Make my art perfect and turn my life into the art .
94 . Help me to serve Thy Cause . 95 . Let me become a perfect instrument to serve Thy divine Cause .
Let me become a perfect channel to deliver Thy divine Message . 96 . Enable me Lord to serve Thy divine Cause .
97 . Fortify and strengthen me and inspire me Lord to Thy will and to serve Thy divine Cause . 98 . Enable me to fulfil my life's purpose in serving Thy divine Cause . 99 . Enable me, Lord, to serve Thy divine Cause with my whole heart . 100 . Give me control over my body and mind and enable me, Lord, to serve Thy divine Cause . 101 . May my heart be prepared for the future guidance of Murshid . May conditions allow me to have the association of Murshid .
May God give me the power, means and desire to serve the divine Cause . 102 . Bless me, Lord, and my dear ones and illuminate my soul to serve Thy divine Cause .
103 . Inspire me, strengthen me and enable me, Lord, to serve Thy divine Cause . 104 . Heal my body, mind and soul, that I may best serve Thy Cause . 105 . Give me wisdom and power that may enable me to serve in Thy Cause . 106 . Prepare me to fulfil my life's purpose in serving Thy divine Cause . 107 . Strengthen my faith, Lord, that I may serve Thy Cause for ever .
108 . Make me a proper channel to serve Thy Cause . 109 . Make me a orooer instrument to serve Thy divine Cause . 110 . Enable me, Lord, in every way to serve Thy divine Cause . 111 . Grant me all that is necessary to serve Thy divine 255 Cause .
256 112 .
Grant me every facility to serve Thy divine Cause .
113 .
Give me all I need to serve Thy divine Cause .
114 .
Make me, Lord, a worthy instrument to serve Thy divin e Cause .
115 .
Make me a worthy instrument to serve Thy great Cause .
116 .
Grant me all I need to be best fitted to serve Th y Cause which is my life's purpose .
117 .
Prepare me to become a proper instrument to be used fo r the furtherance of Thy divine Cause .
118 .
Grant me all that is needed to serve Thy divine Caus e fully .
119 .
Complete my life, Lord, that I may serve Thy divin e
Cause best . 120 .
Enable me to serve Thy Cause every day more and more .
121 .
Free my life, Lord, from all undesirable influences , make it pure and exalted to serve Thy divine Cause .
122 .
Enable me, Lord, to further Thy divine Cause .
123 .
Make me best fitted to serve Thy divine Cause . Health, Balance, Happiness .
124 .
Enable me, Lord, to serve Thy divine Cause : Sufi Mess -
age . 125 .
Thou hast healed me, strengthened me and inspired me , Lord, to serve Thee and Thy divine Cause .
126 .
Arrange my life so that I may serve Thy divine Cause .
127 .
Enable me, Lord, to serve entirely Thy Divine Cause .
128 .
Help me, Lord, that one day I will serve the Sufi Cause .
129 .
Divine beloved, reveal Thy Message through my devote d
heart . 130 .
Make my vision clear, Lord, that I may serve Thy Mess -
age better . 131 .
Inspire me and enable me to serve Thy divine Message .
132 .
Guide me, Lord, to the path on which tread those yo u
favour and enable me to serve Your divine Message . 133 .
Provide me with all I need that I may fulfil my life' s purpose in serving Thy Message .
134 .
Enable me, Lord, to serve Thy divine Message .
135 .
Strengthen me, inspire me and direct me to spread Th y divine Message .
256
25 7
136 . Inspire me, strengthen me and fortify my faith, o Lord, to serve and spread Thy divine Message . 137 . Enable me, Lord, to give my whole heart to the service of Thy Divine Message .
138 . Kindle my heart and illuminate my soul, Lord, that I may spread Thy divine Message . 139 . Make me a channel in all Planes to deliver Thy divine Message . 140 . Awake, awake, awake to the Message of God . 141 .
I
give all Message without saying a word .
142 . I give the Message in silence . 143 . Reveal Thy secret to me, Lord, through my every day experience of life . 144 . I live in God, see His light, enjoy His happiness and experience His peace . 145 . My body is healed, my mind is fortified and my soul is illuminated by the Grace of God . 146 . My mind is at rest, my body is healed and my soul is illuminated by the grace of God . 147 . I have risen above all troubles of life and am happy by the Grace of God . 148 . Enable me, God, to do my life's work which service .
. . . . Thy
149 . My life is dedicated to the service of God .
150 . Fortify my heart, give me a new life and new inspiration that I may see in life Thy divine eminence . In Gd .'s handwriting : Fortify my heart . Give me a new life and new insoiration, that I may see in life Thy divine inspiration . 151 . My respondent heart be still , be still and listen to the consoling voice of God . 152 . Still my heart, be still and listen to the consoling voice of God . 153 . My heart is still to hear the word of God . 154 . Be still, my mind, and hear the word of God that inspires and illuminates . 155 . Let me seek Thy divine kingdom and let all that I sought be added into my life .
156 . Reveal unto me Thy purpose and guide me towards Th y path .
257
258 157 .
Guide me, Lord, to the path that leads to Thy pleasure .
158 .
Help me to understand and obey Thy will .
159 .
I am well and happy in the life and light of God .
160 .
Heal me, Lord, by Thy all sufficient power , give me, Lord, Thine own light to see and thine ow n life to live .
161 .
God, throw on my path Thy divine light and life ,
that I may find sunshine all over . 162 .
Unfold my soul to the Divine light , Attain my soul to the Divine life .
163 .
I am charged by Divine Life and by Divine Light .
164 .
Give me, Lord, Thy light to see, Thy life to live an d Thy almighty power to struggle, Thy patience to bea r all and Thy divine wisdom to understand and to forgive .
165 .
I rise with new life, new courage, and hope to fulfi l the purpose of my life for which God had created me .
166 .
My life is changing and taking a better turn .
167 .
Let my life show growth and expansion in every directio n that is beneficial .
168 .
Ya Qadir - right all my life's affairs .
169 .
Make my path in life smooth and clear .
170 .
Make my life rhythmic, harmonious, progressive and suc -
cessful . 171 .
Help me, Lord, from every direction and make life eas y for me .
172 .
Bring all the possibility of being better to be real ized in my life .
173 .
Providence has its doors open for me everywhere .
174 .
I see the door of the providence open before me every where .
175 .
Providence prepairs all that I must have in my life . Abundance, abundance, abundance .
176 .
Providence is on my side .
177 .
Providence is on my side, so I attract all I need .
178 .
Providence has promised to grant all of need .
179 .
Providence, grant my mind peace and my soul illumina tion . Bless our home with everything we need .
258
259 180 . Providence, grant my mind rest, my heart peace, my sou l illumination and bless our home with everything we need . 181 . My body, heart and soul I gave Thee under Thy divine protection . 182 . I am under divine protection, nothing else has power over me .
'183 . Fill the cup of my heart with Thy divine Spirit . 184 . Quiet my mind, calm my spirit . Surround me, Lord, with the peace of Thine own being . 185 . Fear not, worry not, be not anxious, thy spirit is cured and thy body well . 186 . Open, Lord, to me Thy glorious vision . 187 . Enable me to see Thy divine vision, God, in all things and in every being . 188 . Day by day my vision becomes clearer and clearer . 189 . Make my vision clear and guide me on the right path . 190 . Complete my life by the Grace of Thy perfection . 191 . By the Grace of Thy divine perfection, make my life complete . 192 . My body, mind and soul is healed by Muirshid . I am calm and peaceful . 193 . Guide me to fulfil the purpose of my life . 194 . Guide me aright to fulfil the purpose of my life . 195 . Guide me to fulfil the purpose for which I am born on the earth . 196 .
0 Spirit of Guidance, throw Thy Divine light on my path .
197 . Guide me, Lord, on the right path and illuminate my soul . 198 . Guide me, Lord, to do the right thing which is best for me . 199 . Awake my soul to the call of the Spirit of Guidance . 200 . Strengthen me, inspire me and guide me, Lord, to the road . . . . leads to the goal .
201 . Help me, Lord, to find my self and guide me on the path of life . 202 . The inner guidance leads me toward desired goal . 203 . Guide me on life's path', Lord, that I may feel Your guidance every day . 259
260 204 .
"Ya Hadi", guide my life aright .
205 .
Lord, make me rich with contentment, illuminate th e chamber of my heart with the .light of faith, all tha t I need grant me without having to ask others .
206 .
By the divine power of God I have attained control ove r
my self . 207 .
By the power of Almighty God I control my thought , speech and action .
208 .
Raise me above undue control .
209 .
By the divine power of God I am qualified enough t o teach and strengthened enough to control every situ -
ation . 210 .
Give me new spirit of enthusiasm and courage to procee d on life's path .
211 .
I have strength, courage, enthusiasm and hope .
212 .
I live safely in the spirit of God, and I am free fro m
depression and fear . 213 .
All clouds of depression are scattered away ; I am joy -
ous and I am happy . 214 .
I am surmounting all difficulties of life every hou r
and each day more and more . 215 .
Help me, Lord, to surmount all difficulties .
216 .
Relieve me, God, of all difficulties and purify m y
soul . 217 .
Release me, Lord, from my difficult situation ,
free my life for Thy divine path . 218 .
Strengthen me, God, on my path of duty .
219 .
I am feeling more energetic, more enthusiastic, mor e and more hopeful every day .
220 .
Give me confidence in my self, God, and faith in th e providence .
221 . I seek my life's happiness in God . 222 . Lord, Thou art my happiness and Thou hast made my life happy . 223 . Bless me, heal me and make my life happy . 224 . Inspire me, guide me and lead me through the path of happiness to the divine perfection . 225 . Make my life easy, Lord, for me to live happily . 260
261 226 . Make my life easy and open for me the path of spiritua l attainment . 227 . Make me, Lord, a fountain of happiness for myself and for others .
228 . Enrich my life, Lord, with all that is really good for me . 229 . Grant me life, light, wisdom, power, Lord, to bring all those . . . . . come in my way happiness . 230 . Make me a fountain of happiness for myself and others . 231 . Keep us both free from all harm coming from our adversary . 232 . Grant me, Lord, Thy wisdom, joy and peace . 233 . God, send Thy joy and peace in my life .
234 . Make my life fruitful, joy giving and progressive in every direction . 235 .
"Ya S .bir", fortify me against all attacks upon my soul with Thy divine patience .
236 . Grant me to have all power and wisdom, that I may best fulfil my life's purpose . 237 . Give me that wisdom and Hower which will enable me to influence my fellow beings to their welfare and welbeing . 238 . I am purified, revivified and envigdrated by the divine power of God . 239 . I am purified, revivified and envigorated by Thy divine power, Ye God . 240 . Providence has blessed me . Divine light has illuminated me . Thy almighty power has strengthened me . 241 . Make me strong and fortify me, Lord, with Thy almighty power . 242 . Heal me, all sufficient God, by Thy divine power . 243 . Let Thy power and wisdom balance my life . 244 . "Ya Habib", let Thy power and Thy wisdom guide my soul . 245 . Give me, Lord, Thy cower of action, that my life may become a success . 246 . Surround me, God, with Thy power, glory and success . 247 . Give, Lord, Thy divine power to my spirit that I may serve humanity better . 261
262 248 . My heart is the receptacle of Thy divine inspiration and power . 249 . "Ya Qadlr", strengthen my character and help me to progress . 250 .
0 Thou, the Allpowerful Being, God, the Lord of heaven and the earth, give me strength from Thine own strength, give me wisdom from Thine own wisdom, to rise above the strife of life .
251 . Fortify me, Lord, and strengthen my heart to make my way through life . 252 . Make my vision clear, Lord, and strengthen me to face the struggle of life . 253 . Give me, Lord, Thy divine influence, which may spread among my dear ones . 254 . Bring Thy harmony and peace in my home . 255 . Connect our lives with the blessing of marriage . 256 . Connect us both in the blessing of marriage . 257 . Unite our lives in the bond of marriage .
258 . Raise me above all limitations . 259 . Free me, Lord, from all undesirable influences and keep me safe under Your divine wings . 260 . Bless me, inspire me, and draw me closer to Thy divine being . . 261 . Inspire me, illuminate me and make my vision clear . 262 . Let my intelligence shine out as love, let my limited self expand to Thy divine Perfection . 263 . Success is my birth right . 264 . My success is the sure 1) by the grace of God . Note 1) : The text in Inayat Khan's handwriting should perhaps read 'secure' instead of 'the sure' or 'sure'. without 'the' or with the word 'success' repeated after 'sure' . 265 . All my efforts for good are being crowned with success . 266 . Guide me on the right path, inspire my heart with Thine own wisdom and make my life a success . 267 . Open my way to attain all I need . 268 . A door is open before me leading to success . 2-62
26 3 269 . Open my way in life and clear my path . Help me to go forward in life and to attain success in every direction .
270 . I erase past out of my mind, brighten the present and build a hope for the future . 271 . Help me to progress, Lord, in every direction . 272 . Insaire me, strengthen me and fortify my life, Lord, that I may steadily progress in every direction of life . 273 . Help me to progress, Lord, in every direction of life . 274 . Enable me, Lord, to progress in every way .
275 . Make me progress in every direction of life . 276 . Clear my way, Lord, on the path of life and help me to progress in every direction . 277 . Help my life to fulfil its purpose . 278 . My life proceeds towards its purpose . 279 . Make to my soul clear my life's purpose . 280 . People are favourable to me , Conditions are favourable to me, Planets are favourable to me ,
Because You are favourable to me, my Lord . 281 . 0, Thou who are the light of heaven and earth, throw on my path in life Thy divine light . 282 . Thy divine light illuminates my heart and I see in life all sunshine . 283 . God, throw on my life sunshine . 284 . I have Thy divine light upon my heart that I may see my way and understand life better . 285 . Illuminate my soul with Thy Divine light . 286 . My heart is fortified and is being filled with the light of God . 287 . "Munlr", kindle my soul, that I may find my Self, its purpose and on . . . . 1 ) Note 1) : The sentence in Inayat Khan's handwriting was left unfinished . 288 . No death for me . 289 . My body is made of vapor, is floating through the space . 290 . My mind is still, my thought is steady, my sight i s
keen, my life is balanced .
263
264 291 .
Heal my body, still my mind, illuminate my soul .
292 .
Heal my body, still my mind, .Lord, and illuminate my
soul . 293 .
Calm my nerves, still my mind, give my heart rest, Lord , and make my life happy .
294 .
Calm my nerves, still my mind, give my heart rest, Lord ,
and make me in life happy . 295 .
Make my vision clear, make my mind still .
Kindle my heart, God, and illuminate my soul . 296 .
My mind, free thyself from all thoughts and imagination s and all feelings and emotions, be still, be still, b e still .
297 .
Still my mind, kindle my heart and illuminate my soul .
298 .
My vision is clear, my mind is still, my heart is kindle d and my soul is illuminated .
299 .
Give my mind rest, my heart peace, and my soul illumina -
tion . 300 .
Let me be fearless and free from all worries and anxiet y and let my mind be restful, calm and peaceful .
301 .
My heart is happy, my mind is rested, and my soul i s illuminated by the divine power of God .
302 .
Heal my body, strengthen my mind and illuminate my soul .
303 .
Grant health to my body, peace to my heart, illuminatio n to my soul .
304 .
God, heal my body, strengthen my mind and illuminate m y soul .
30S .
Make my heart respondent, my mind capable and my bod y sound, that I may fulfil the purpose of my life .
306 .
Open my leart .
307 .
Open my heart that Thy spirit it may reflect .
308 .
My body is the Temple of God and my heart His shrine .
309 .
Make my heart Thy divine temple .
310 .
Inspire my mind, kindle my heart and illuminate my soul .
311 .
My body is healed, my heart is kindled and my soul i s illuminated by the light of God .
312 .
Heal my body, kindle my heart and illuminate my soul .
313 .
Fortify my heart, o Lord, to withstand all in life wit h Thy divine patience .
264
265 314 . My heart reflects Akbar, the mighty One who attract s
all and inspires (?) 1) all . Note 1) : Question mark put by Inayat Khan . 315 . Release my heart from all that keeps me back from Thy peace and liberate my soul .
316 . My heart is unfolding toward its object in life . 317 . Radiate Thou through my soul . 318 . Awake, my soul, to make your way towards life's purpose and goal . 319 . Awake my soul to Thy perpetual glory . 320 . Let my soul seek Thee, Lord, in all things . 321 .
Let Thy . . . . run 1) through my body, let my soul merge into Your Being . Note 1) : Over the dotted amine was written 'word', 'run' was cancelled and replaced by 'raise', both in Sr .'s handwriting .
322 . My soul is now blossoming to bear fruit(s) ? .1 ) Note 1) : Inayat Khan wrote the 's' between brackets after 'fruit', with a question mark . 323 . Raise my soul that I may see the Truth . 324 . Unfold my soul to expand in the spheres of freedom . 325 . Unfold my soul that I may see life better . 326 . May my soul unfold and Thy light give up . 327 . May my soul unfold every moment of the day . 328 . Unfold my soul, make my sight keen and draw me closer to Thee, my divine Beloved . 329 . Unfold, my soul, and expand to perfection . 330 . Unfold my soul,
0 Lord, that I may see Thy sunshine .
331 . "Ya Wahabo", enable my soul to expression . 332 . My body, heart and soul radiate the healing spirit of God . 333 . My body, soul and mind are healed . 334 . "Ya Shafl", heal Thou my breath, my thought, my word, my touch and my glance, "Ya Kafl" . 265
266
335 . Bless my home with providence, health, harmony and peace . 336 . In Thee I seek my health, comfort, balance and peace . 337 . Heal Thou, Lord, through my glance, through my touch and through my words and atmosphere, Thou Almighty and Allsufficient . 338 . Let my glance touch and breath have Thy healing power and let me serve, Lord, Thy divine Cause . 339 . Heal me, o all sufficient God . 340 . By Thy healing power, Lord, I am healed .
341 . My body, mind and soul are healed by the divine power of God . 342 . My body, heart and soul are healed by the divine power of God . 343 . Heal my body, fill my heart with joy and elevate my soul . 344 . God, complete my life in bringing me my better half . 345 . Open the spring of my heart from which rises Thy healing power . 346 . Health, harmony, happiness and bring in my home peace . 347 . By the divine power of God my body is free from all illness .
348 . Health, power and happiness . 349 . Let Thy divine power of healing passing through my being heal me and those whom I heal . 350 . Your health is sound by the grace of the divine Perfection . 351 . My body, heart and soul are healed by the divine spirit, nothing is the matter with me . 352 . Ye shall, o divine Healer, with Thy mercy and grace heal my husband, Thou art all Sufficient . 353 . I feel healthy, happy and vigorous by the divine power of God . 354 . Heal me, Lord, giving me strength out of Thy Almighty power . 355 . "Shaft", heal my body, heart and soul . "Kafi", give me sufficient strength, joy and peace . 356 . "Shaft", divine Healer, heal my body, heart and soul . "Kafi", Thou art all sufficient . 266
26 7 357 . I am quite well . 358 .
Behind my activity there is Divine
Impulse .
359 . My soul is made free from jealousy , anger, depression and fear . 360 . My balance is secure in the hands of God . 361 . My balance is secure in divine hands . 362 .
Balance my life that I may know and act aright .
363 . Almighty God, Lord of heaven and earth , give me the power to control my self and balance my life . 364 . Free me from the capt ivity of my life's condition . 365 . Complete my life with all best for me .
I need and with all that is
366 .
Beloved Lord, Almighty God, make my life complete .
367 .
Make
368 .
Complete my life with all I need .
us both united,
make our life complete .
369 . Send me , God, the other part of my soul and complete my life . 370 . Make my life happy and complete .
267
26 9 EXPLANATION OF FOREIGN WORDS AND NAMES . The following signs have been used : to indicate the primal stress ; to indicate a long vowel ; kh to indicate a sound as the 'ch' in the German word 'Dach' ; z to indicate a sound as the English 'th' in the English word 'the' ; before 'a' and 'i' to indicate a vowel sound, similar to a sound in the throat as a very short cough . A.
Akbar
-great ; Mogul emperor of India, 1542-1605 .
H.
'Arif
-knowing, wise, pious, devout ; a holy man, saint .
A.
Barzakh
-interval, partition, bar, the interval of time .
Beethoven
-Ludwig van -, German composer, 1770-1827 .
P.
a
Begum
S.
-lady, queen, a title of Mogul ladies . Bodhisattva -the one whose being is light ; the one who be comes a Buddha .
S .
Buddha
-an enlightened one .
S .
Chaitanya
-consciousness, intelligence .
A.
Fans
A.
Fazl
A.
Fikr
S.
G3ngi
-The Ganges - main river of North India considered sacred by the Hindus .
A.
Habib
-beloved, friend ; the Divine Beloved .
A.
Had!
-guide .
Judaism
-the profession or the practice of the Jewis h
Here is meant Gautama Siddhartha . Sufi terminology : the Spirit or Light of God . -destruction, death ; Sufi terminology : annihila tion . -excellence, virtue, grace, favour, superiority , wisdom . -thought, reflection ; Sufi terminology : a Suf i practice .
religion ; the religious system or polity o f the Jews . A.
Kafi
-sufficient, all-pervading life of God, the All Sufficient (a name of God) .
S.
Karma
-act, work, result ; Sufi terminology : the rhyth m
S.
Krishna
-dark, black ; Messenger of God said to be th e eighth avatira of Vishnu .
S.
LAya
-absorption, destruction, annihilation ; also a musical term .
S.
MaitrBya
-the friend of God, the Rassul ; the next huma n Buddha to come .
of past actions .
A . Mfilakut -spirits, angels, the angelic world ; Sufi termiH' nolo qy : sphere of thought and imagination . Note : The origin of a word is indicated by S . - Sanskrit, A . - Arabic, P . - Persian , H . - Hindustani, Hb . Hebrew . 269
2 70
S.
Maya
-delusion, supernatural power, illusion, cosmi c illusion which makes the One appear as a mul titude .
P.
Mist!, Masts-drunkenness, intoxication, lust .
A.
Munir
-brilliant, shining .
A. P.
Mureed
-follower, disciple of a Murshid .
A. P.
Mdrshid
-spiritual teacher .
A.
Mus&wwir
-fashioner, designer, painter, sculptor .
Napoleon
-Napoleon I Bonaparte, Emperor of France, 1769 1821 .
Narciss
-Nark.i.ssos, son of the rivergod Kephisos an d
S.
Nirvana
-extinction of the consciousness of a separat e existence . Sufi terminology : realizing the soul's freedom .
A.
Nur
-light, splendour ; ether, the first of the fiv e elements .
P.
Omar Khayyam-Famous Persian mathematician, astronomer, free thinker and poet of the 11th/12th century .
A.
Qadir
-powerful, having legal power, the capable .
A.
Qadir
-powerful, the Almighty .
A.
Rassul
-Apostle, Messenger, Prophet .
A.
Rissalat
-Apostleship, state of being a Rassul, divin e mission .
A.
Sabir
-patient, resigned .
A.
Salat
-prayer, blessing, benediction, the first dut y of a Moslim ; the second prayer in the Suf i Universal Worship .
S.
Sangatha
-meeting-place, centre, confluence .
S.
Sangita
-music, symphony, song of many voices .
P.
SAki
-see Sigi .
P.
Sigi
-pourer of wine, in Persian Sufi poetry ; th e giver of ecstasy ; the symbol of God wishing t o reveal Himself .
A.
Saum
-fasting ; the first prayer in the Sufi Universa l
A.
Shafi
-healing, the healing power of God .
the nymph Leiriope . (Greek Mythology) .
Worship . Shakespeare -William -, English poet and play-wright, 1564 1616 . S.
Vairigya
A.
Viladat Day -birthday . The birthday of PIr-o-Murshid Inaya t Than on July 5th, celebrated by his followers . Wagner
270
-freedom of all worldly desires, indifference .
-Richard, German composer and writer, 1813-1883 .
27 1 A . Wahhabo -the Bestower of blessings to his creatures . A . Ya Habib -oh Beloved, oh Friend . A . Ya Had! -oh Guide . A . Ya Kafi -oh All-Sufficient One . A . Ya Quadir -oh Almighty . A . Ya Sabir -oh Patient One . A . Ya Shafi -oh Healer, oh All-Healing Power . Hb .
Yaveh
-God .
Note : The following dictionaries have been consulted : M . Monnier-Williams Sanskrit-English ; Al Faraid Arabic-English ; J .F . Platt's Hindustani-English dictionary (for Persian and Hindi words) ; Duncan Forbes's Hindustani-English dictionary ; Rubab Monna's Short Dictionary of Foreign Words in Hazrat 'Inayat Khan's Teachings, 1982, East-West Publications, London and The Hague .
271
27 3 I N D E X
B .o .S . = Part One : "The Bowl of Saki" . U .S . = Part Two and Part Three : "Hitherto Unpublished Sayings" and "Additional Sayings and Words" . Aph . = Part Four : "Aphorisms" . Phr . = Part Five : "Phrases" .
A .B .C . - 25th Aug . B .o .S . Abide, to - 4th Nov . B .o .S . 569 U .S . Able, to be - 27th May ; 5th July B .o .S . 3, 216, 234, 456 U .S . 119, 144, 191, 209, 324 Aph . Abode - 6th March ; 1st June ; 16th July B .o .S . 397 U .S . Abolish, to - 530, 608 U .S . About - 17th Febr . ; 9th March ; 12th June ; 26th October . B .o .S . 346, 350, 384, 432, 478 , 531, 540, 576, 608 U .S . 240 Aoh . 66 Phr . Above - 15th, 27th May ; 9th ,
30th June ; 15th Sept . ; 1s t Nov . B .o .S . 54, 74, 103, 115, 138, 157 , 191, 222, 230, 254, 269, 285, 297, 381, 420, 483, 492b, 514, 533, 534, 538 , 544, 621, 632, 642 U .S . 52, 97, 161, 227, 246, 249 , 264, 303, 305 Aph . 147, 208, 250, 258 Phr . Absence - 20th Oct . B .O .S . 120, 442 U .S . 107, 328 Aph . Absent - 277 Aph . Absolute(ly) - 451, 453 U .S . 103 Aph . Absorb, to - 3rd April B .o .S . 362 U .S . 194 Aph . Absorption - 215 Aph . Abstain, to - 29 U .S . Abstinence - 107 U .S . Absurd 121 U .S . Abundance - 621 U .S . 9, 13, 17, 62, 175 Phr . Accept, to - 139 U .S . Accident - 78 U .S . Accommodation - 131 Aph . Accomplish, to - 27th May ; 12th Nov . B .o .S . 207, 296 U .S- .
(cont . Accomplish, to) 134, 135, 207, 278,'285 , 299 Aph . Accordance - 619 U .S . 215 Aph . Acccording(ly) - 10th, 29th March ; 23rd May ; 2nd Aug . ; 30th Sept . ; 1st, 27th Oct . ; 25th Nov . B .o .S . 125, 174, 210, 290, 326 , 374 U .S . 131, 153, 169, 215 Aph . Accusation - 65, 191 U .S . Accuse, to - 65, 165, 574 U .S . Accustom, to - 442 U .S . Achieve, to - 527, 629 U .S . Acquaintance(s) - 19th May B .o .S . Acquire, to - 3rd March ; 26th Nov . B .o .S . 655 U .S . 20, 156, 184, 187, 267 Aph . Act - 16th July B .o .S . Act, to - 58, 175, 296, 342 , 441, 644 U .S . 362 Phr . Action(s) - 14th, 15th Febr . ; 4th, 17th May ; 24th July ; 8th Sept . ; 2nd Dec . B .o .S . 51, 80, 137, 379, 422, 462 , 468, 499, 573, 596 U .S . 30, 33, 51, 281, 319, 352 Aph . 207, 245 Phr . Activity - 12th Jan . ; 5t h May B .o .S . 53, 338, 441 U .S . 358 Phr . Adam 398 U .S . 260 Aph . Add, to - 12th July B .O .S . 338a U .S . 324 Aph . 155 Phr . Addition - 236 Aph . Adept 576 U .S . Adjustment - 598 U .S . Admiration - 330 U .S . Admire, to - 62, 129, 264 , 317, 391, 605 U .S . 275 Aph . 273
27 4 Admirer - 13th Aug . 18
B .o .S . U .S .
(cont . All ) 15, 4 5, 77, 79, 93,
122 ,
Admit, to - 39, 40
U .S .
134,
191 ,
Adopt, to - 16th Jan . Adoration - 330
B .o .S . U .S .
195, 217, 218, 233, 240, 243,
227, 229 , 259, 262 ,
Adore, to Advance, to 299 Advancement Advantage -
U .S . U .S . Aph . Aph . U .S .
276, 309, 326, 345, 388,
279, 313, 329, 352, 408,
291, 318, 335, 381, 428,
292 , 323 , 344 , 387 , 433 ,
203 - 586 - 117 36, 52
137,
151,
285, 317, 334, 372, 416,
162,
Aph .
449,
451 - 453, 455,
456 ,
Adversary(ies) - 208, 451 231 Advice - 332
U .S . Phr . U .S .
458, 490, 512,
463, 492, 517,
477, 493, 519,
478, 498, 528,
483 , 500 , 544 ,
Affairs - 326, 332 168 Affection - 330, 492b Affirm, to - 3
U .S . Phr . U .S . Aph .
554, 567, 598, 623,
555, 568, 599, 635,
562, 563, 575, 578, 601, 610, 642, 647,
565 , 581 , 619 , 654 ,
Afford, to - 3, 221
U .S .
657,
658,
660
Afraid - 12th Dec .
B .o .S .
43, 63, 65, 66,
119
Aph . 80, 249 After - 12th May ; 7th Nov . ; B .o .S . 19th Dec . 16, 54, 118, 146, 258, 266, 295, 355, 385, 398, 484, U .S . 557, 575
155, 156, 234, 244, 351 After-life - 7th May Afterwards - 16
Aph . B .O .S . U .S .
Again - 9th Febr . ; 7th, 28th
115, 178 204, 276, 322, 1, 9,
116, 180, 215, 287, 324, 11,
U .S .
70, 78, 92 ,
122, 132, 163 , 192, 194, 201 , 218, 261, 271 , 300, 307, 321 , 326, 343, 352 18, 2 7- 29, 37 ,
38, 42, 47 -50,
52, 56, 62 ,
63, 69, 81, 111 , 11 3, 116 , 118, 121, 133, 139, 141 ,
155,
160,
161,
164,
168 ,
Nov . 245, 497 Against - 8th, 25th Jan . 10, 68a, 76, 98, 191, 342, 395, 423, 436, 443, 486, 514, 542, 585, 590, 620 141, 300 21, 69, 235 Age(s) - 29th Sept . 125, 323, 387, 559
B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S .
U .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S .
172, 175, 177, 178, 187 , 205, 213- 216, 228, 229 , 231, 235, 236, 242, 258 , 259, 265, 267, 282, 296 , 313 - 315, 320, 347, 365 , 368 All-merciful - 4th No v . All-pervading - 565 Allpowerful - 453 250
Agony(ies) - 62, 548
U .S .
All right - 598
Agree, to - 275, 318 Aim - 24th'April 371, 441, 512, 540, 604 4 Air - 4, 381, 468
U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S .
All-sufficient 337, 339, 352, Allow, to - 3rd, May 274, 296, 383
Akbar - 314
Phr .
B .o .S . Alive - 21st June U .S . 452 All - 2nd, 12th, 20th, 26th, 27th Jan . ; 25th Febr . ; 20th , 22nd, 23rd, 31st March ; 30th April ; 30th May ; 18th, 21st, 22nd June ; 20th, 21st , 24th July ; 17th Aug . ; 2nd 3rd, 13th, 27th, 29th, 30th Sept . ; 8th, 10th, 12th, 15th, 16th, 21st, 22nd, 31st Oct . ; 18th Nov . ; 15th B .o .S . Dec . 274
Aph .
350
Phr . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . Phr .
U .S . 160, 356 9th,
242 , Phr . 25t h B .o .S . U .S .
Aph .
Phr . 101 Almighty - 164, 207, 240 , 241, 337, 354, 363, 366 Phr . U .S . Almost - 449 Alone - 18th, 31st Ja n . ; 23r d Febr . ; 20 th May ; 7th July ; B .o .S . 16th Sept . ; 8th Oct . 12, 34, 7 2, 137, 138, 205 , 214, 362, 449, 453, 512 , U .S . 517, 538, 592 Aph . 176, 223, 252 Along - 25th May S .o .S . U .S . 275, 299
27 5 Already - 30th Oct . 372, 536 207
B .o .S . U .S . Aph .
Anxiety - 18, 300 Anxious - 185 Any - 11th Febr . ; 26th May ;
Also - 15th Febr . ; 27th June ; 8th July ; 15th Dec .
B .o .S .
2nd July ; 29th Dec . 77, 180, 289, 401, 512
B .o .S . U .S .
234
Aph .
1
Phr .
44, 150, 153, 158, 371,
Phr . Phr .
441, 500, 629
U .S .
259, 342
Aph .
Anybody - 423
U .S .
U .S .
Anyone - 16th July
B .o .S .
Although - 540
Always - 3rd, 18th, 19th
52, 165, 242, 384, 423, 453 ,
Jan . ; 16th Febr . ; 11th March ; 29th April ; 4th May ;
481, 486 Anything - 12th, 29th Dec .
19th, 28th June ; 5th July ; 4th Aug . ; 2nd, 3rd, 10th Oct . ; 16th, 20th, 22nd Dec . 4, 18, 54, 120, 121, 191, 227, 246, 249, 256, 335,
28, 87, 279, 427, 602, 606 , B .o .S .
445, 485, 514, 541, 629, 646 U .S . Aph . 27, 87, 170, 243, 339 Ambassador - 502 U .S . Amidst - 10th Dec . B .o .S . 54, 381 U .S . Among - 30th July B .O .S . 21, 54, 205, 221, 226, 352, 394 U .S . 179 Aph . 253 Phr . Amount - 166, 504 U .S .
33
U .S . B .o .S .
Aph .
628, 647 96, 346 Apart - 91 149
U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph .
Apparent - 452
U .S .
Appear, to - 7th June ; 19th Nov . 54, 157, 219, 262, 290 , 338, 658 193 Appetite(s) - 1st June 299, 340 Apple - 19th Febr . Applicable - 607 Appoint, to - 115 Appreciate, to - 10, 11
U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Aph .
Appreciation-- 20th June
B .o .S .
Amply - 48
Phr .
Amusement - 6 2 Amusing - 367
U .S . U .S .
164 Approach, to - 186
Analysation - 330 Analyse, to - 10th Jan . ; 10th July 330 Ancient(s) - 30th Sept . 139 Angel(s) - 115, 500 89, 92, 213, 274 Angelic - 500, 520 154, 158, 251 Anger - 26 359 Animal(s) - 161, 299, 338a, 408, 427, 604 91, 105, 213 Annihilation - 604 238 Annoy, to - 191 Answer - 24th Jan . ; 30th April 92, 155, 343, 453, 502, 640 7, 302, 344 Answer, to - 15th Febr . 89, 93, 286 248, 257, 302
U .S .
Apt - 11th Febr . B .o .S . U .S . Argue, to - 434 Argument - 339, 370 U .S . 218, 300 Aph . U .S . Arif - 294 Aright (see also Right) B .o .S . 7th July Aph . Arise, to - 7, 20 Aristocracy - 123 U .S . B .o .S . Arm(s) - 9th Sept . Phr . 75 Army - 124 U .S . U .S . Around - 219, 301, 408, 500 Aph . 44, 150, 154 Phr . 40, 57, 66 U .S . Arouse, to - 630 Arrange, to - 126 Phr . U .S . Arrest, to - 334, 547 Arrive, to - 11th Febr . ; 10th June ; 3rd, 5th Aug . ; 3r d B .o .S . Nov . U .S . 255, 338a, 540 Aph . 67 U .S . Arrow - 650 B .o .S . Art - 11th Dec . 224, 251, 264, 435, 448,
B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . Aph . Phr . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . Aph .
315
B .o .S .
U .S .
Aph . U .S .
275
276 (cont . Art) 491, 597, 634 U .S . Attitude - 2 9th J une ; 30th 268, 276, 325 Aph . ;,',:Nev . ; 22nd Dec . B .o .S . 91 93 Phr . 363, 443, 491, 620 U .S . Artificiality - 241, 464 U .S . 77 Aph . Artist - 11th Dec . B .o .S . Attract, to - 19, 155, 351 U .S . 1, 605 U .S . 217, 220, 225, 320 Aph . 143 Aph . 177, 314 Phr . Artistic - 634 U .S . Attraction - 330 U .S . Asceticism - 21st Sept . B .o .S . Attractive - 12th Oct . B .o .S . Ashamed - 320 U .S . Attribute(s) - 628 U .S . Aside 91 U .S . 128 Aph . Ask, to - 7th Oct . ; 5th Dec . B .o .S . Attribute, to - 451 U .S . 239, 512, 640 U .S . B .o .S . Audible - 29 th Nov . 170, 302, 352 Aph . Aught - 126 U .S . 205 Phr . Aura - 154 Aph . Asleep - 27th June ; 22nd Aug . B .o .S . Average - 29 4, 643 U .S . 299 U .S . Avoid, to - 40, 79 U .S . 84 Aoh . Avoidable - 4th Dec . B .O .S . Aspect(s) - 12th Jan . ; 25th Await, to - 18th Dec . B .o .S . June B .o .S . 138, 325, 469 U .S . 53, 94, 125, 372, 490, 506 , Awake - 22nd Aug . B .o .S . 660 U .S . 57 U .S . 63, 65, 178, 272, 333 Aoh . 84 Aph . Aspiration - 21 Aph . 64 Phr . Aspire, to - 227 U .S . Awake, to - 140, 199, 318 , Ass 394 U .S . 319 Phr . Assimilate, to - 5th Febr . B .o .S . Awaken, to - 29th May ; 27th , 217, 495 U .S . 28th June ; 20th July B .o .S . Assimilation - 330 U .S . 317, 421, 571 U .S . Association - 602 U .S . 102, 108, 239 Aph . 101 Phr . Awakening - 25th April B .o .S . Astral - 16th June B .o .S . Aware - 258 Aph . Astray 441 U .S . Away - 14th May ; 1st June ; Atheism - 128 U .S . 17th July ; 20th Dec . B .o .S . Atmosphere - 26th Jan . ; 13th 19, 55, 56 , 138, 381, 437 , Oct . ; 30th Nov . B .o .S . 464, 500, 514, 647 U .S . 86, 262 U .S . 218, 318, 322 Aph . Atmospheric - 2nd Aug . B .O .S . 213 Phr . 337 Phr . Atom(s) - 29th June B .o .S . 4 U .S . Babe 350 U .S . Attach, to - 29th Aug . B .o .S . Back - 4th Jan . ; 9th, 15th 381 U .S . Febr . ; 25th June ; 3rd Oct . B .o .S . 249 Aph . 177, 179 U .S . Attachment - 8 U .S . 211, 260, 352 Aph . Attack(s) - 235 Phr . 315 Phr . Attain, to - 11th, 12th Backbone - 356 U .S . Febr . ; 26th May ; 8th Dec . B .o .S . Backward(s) - 173, 177, 414 U .S . 452, 512, 533 U .S . Bad - 14th Febr . ; 16th, 24t h 41, 44, 109, 163, 164, 180 , July ; 12th Oct . B .o .S . 182, 204, 235, 254, 313 , 374, 384, 451, 586 U .S . 314 Aph . Badness - 214 Aph . 162, 206, 267, 269 Phr . Bag 201 U .S . Attainment - 20th Febr . ; 28t h Balance - 21st Jan . ; 7th , June ; 1st Oct . ; 3rd Nov . B .o .S . 24th July B .o .S . 540, 634 U .S . 625, 627 U .S . 91, 194, 204, 315, 348 Aph . 315 Aph . 226 Phr . 83, 123, 336, 360, 361 Phr . Attend, to - 490, 660 U .S . Balance, to - 12th Jan . B .o .S . Attention - 339 U .S . 20, 72, 243, 290, 362, 363 Phr . 276
27 7 Bar(s) - 290, 328 U .S . Bare 453 U .S . Barefooted - 381, 559 U .S . Bargain - 243 U .S . B .o .S . Barrier(s) - 21st Oct . 206, 656 U .S . Barzakh - 290 U .S . Base, to - 417 U .S . Basis 633 U .S . 82 Aph . Battle - 9th June ; 22nd Dec . B .o .S . 104, 189 U .S . 269 Aph . Battle, to - 104 U .S . Beak(s) - 161 U .S . Beam, to - 18th July B .o .S . Bear, to - 18th Febr . ; 21s t
April ; 1st Aug . ; 13th, 23rd Sept . ; 13th Dec . B .o .S . 136, 139, 258, 262, 296 , 299, 381, 449, 497, 652 U .S . 40, 138, 207, 211, 253, 261, 271 Aph . 164, 195, 322 Phr . Beast(s) - 180 Aph . Beautiful - 7th May ; 31st Dec .B .o .S . 11, 13, 14, 45, 106, 136 ,
151, 154, 280, 338a, 381 , 391, 411, 645 U .S . 9, 194 Aph . Beautify, to - 240 U .S . 78 Phr . Beauty - 6th Febr . ; 1st April ; 22nd June ; 16th Oct . ; 13th Dec . B .o .S . 18, 128 -131, 151, 154, 229 , 230, 240, 253, 276, 315, 317, 334, 338a, 339, 381 , 387, 439, .461, 528, 583 U .S . 9 -11, 13 -17, 19, 27, 63 , 68, 76, 100, 120, 186, 277 , 290, 324, 341 Aph . 73 -75, 79, 91, 92 Phr . Because - 30th June ; 14th ,
25th July ; 6th, 21st Oct . ; 18th Nov . B .o .S . 54, 127, 278, 405, 472 , 504, 582, 612, 644, 654 , 657 U .S . 130, 170, 193, 216, 302 , 328, 350 Aph . 280 Phr . Become, to - 7th, 8th, 27t h Jan . ; 14th Febr . ; 15th April ; 9th May ; 12th, 25th, 30th June ; 20th, 23rd July ; 15th Sept . ; 16th, 30th Oct . ; 17th, 22nd Nov . ; 1st, 17t h Dec . B .o .S .
(cont . Become, to ) 17, 58, 62, 144, 161, 206, 208, 226, 237, 243, 263, 285, 298, 313, 314, 316, 320, 374, 402, 406, 429, 450, 456, 459, 484, 499, 503, 507, 508, 514, 525 , 539, 604 U .S . 16, 27, 31, 43, 46, 55, 71, 90, 98, 115, 117, 139, 158, 172, 197, 200, 201, 203 , 230, 231, 249, 260, 269, 280, 283, 291, 292, 297, 299, 303, 320, 321, 324 , 327, 349 Aph . 80, 95, 117, 188, 245 Phr . Beethoven - 634 U .S . Before - 4th Jan . ; 19th, 30th March ; 19th April ; 16th June ; 3rd Aug . ; 2nd, 7th Nov . B .o .S . 16, 106, 192, 227, 287 , 290, 306, 313, 334, 386, 449, 450, 453, 479, 527 , 547, 605, 621, 645, 657 U .S . 234, 244, 273, 327, 348 , 351 Aph . 174, 268 Phr . Beforehand - 207 Aph . Beggar - 19th Jan . B .O .S . 328 U .S . Begin, to - 26th Febr . ; 25th Aug . ; 29th Oct . ; 7th Nov . B .o .S . 22, 147, 162, 198, 262 , 273, 297, 333, 447, 519 , 568, 638 U .S . 60, 67, 88, 141, 306, 329 Aph . Beginning - 24 Aph . Beguile, to - 127 U .S . Behind - 4th Jan . ; 15th Dec . B .o .S . 118, 228, 291, 477, 511 , 621, 657 U .S . 19, 141, 329, 358 Aph . Being(s) - 20th Jan . ; 26th , 27th, 29th June ; 3rd July ; 3rd, 18th, 29th Sept . ; 10th, 14th Oct . ; 7th Nov . B .o .S . 27, 94, 131, 240, 276, 335 , 368, 372, 381, 453, 455, 457, 468, 478, 491, 500, 507, 523, 591, 621, 639 , 642 U .S . 38, 43, 70, 91, 101, 122 , 124, 127, 144, 159, 161, 163, 180, 189, 204, 262 , 287, 301, 323, 339 Aph . 70, 82, 184, 187, 250, 260, 321, 349 Phr . Belief - 27th July ; 23rd Oct .B .O .S . 277
278 (cont . Belief) 448 3, 240, 317, 340 Believe, to - 27th Febr . ; 3rd March 103, 242, 334, 346, 369,
U .S . Aph . B .o .S .
535, 630
U .S .
68, 239
Aph .
(cont . Beyond) 11th March ; 5th, 26th July ; 3rd Sept . ; 11th, 21st Oct . B .O .S . 32, 141, 182, 207, 242 , 292, 372, 381 U .S . 18, 52, 63, 249 Aph . Bible, the - 6th March ; 17th
Nov .
B .O .S .
Believer(s) - 30th July 133 300 Bell(s) - 438
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S .
349 59 Bind, to - 341 279
302 Belong, to - 25th July ; 21st
Aph,
Bird(s) - 137, 161, 408, 427 , 604 U .S .
B .o .S . U .S .
18, 91, 108, 179, 180 Birth - 26th July ; 9th Dec .
Oct . ; 23rd Dec . 202, 466, 563
U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph .
Aph . B .o .S .
112, 276, 281, 350 Belonging(s) - 21
Aph . U .S .
Beloved - 143, 204, 240, 491 186, 224, 235, 240
U .S . Aph .
Birthright - 37, .327 263 Bite, to - 67
Aph . Phr . U .S .
Phr .
Bitter(ed) - 31st May
B .O .S .
U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S .
175, 237, 266, 308, 429 , 436 Bitterness - 6th March 464, 601
U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
Aph .
Blame - 13th July
B .o .S .
B .o .S .
Blame, to - 6th June ; 4th
129, 328, 366 Below - 222, 492b, 621 Bemoan, to - 11th July Bend, to - 2nd March 192
298, 301 Beneath - 28th Sept .
156, 157 Benediction - 2nd March Beneficence - 25, 491 Beneficial - 167 Benefit, to - 538 Beside(s) - 558, 645 306 Best - 19th March ; 11th May ; 14th June ; 11th July ; 23rd Dec .
U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Phr . U .S . U .S . Aph .
B .o .S .
82, 88, 141, 160, 175, 176,
July
B .o .S .
Blank - 449 U .S . Bless, to - 11th Febr . ; 21s t March ; 6th Nov . B .o .S . 2, 74, 124a, 133, 192, 227 , 240, 449, 583 U .S . 59, 89, 264, 286 Aph . 2 - 6, 9 - 43, 45 - 56, 5 8 - 63, 65, 102, 179, 180 , 223, 240, 260, 335 Phr . March ; 18th Dec .
334, 384, 468, 614, 639
U .S .
119, 282 16, 104, 116, 119, 123, 198, 236, 365 Bestow, to - 52 Better - 24th Sept .
Aph . Phr . Phr . B .o .S .
16, 247, 338a, 380, 384,
278
U .S . Aph .
Blessing(s) - 2nd, 31s t
189, 195, 218, 236, 247,
410, 482, 512, 514, 608, 6 :4 226, 265, 283 130, 166, 247, 284, 325, 344 Better, to - 34, 172 Between - 21st Jan ; 1st Nov . 108, 128, 290, 360a, 379, 450, 608, 625 170, 199, 212, 215, 302 Bewilderment - 16th Dec . Beyond - 10th, 13th Jan . ;
257, 336, 497 38
592, 637 162, 258 1, 2, 7, 8, 10, 33, 40, 48 57, 64, 255, 256 Blind(ly) - 21st April ; 8th
June U .S . Aph . Phr . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . Aoh . B .o .S .
B .O .S .
93, 103, 134, 181, 569 ,
398 332 Blind, to - 31st Jan . ; 1s t May ; 27th July 541 Bliss - 31st March ; 1s t April 655 91, 92, 261, 321 4 Block, to - 4th Sept . Bloom - 594
U .S . Aph . , Phr .
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S .
B .O .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S .
279
(cont . Bloom ) 67 Aph . Bloom, to - 10th Dec . B .O .S 22, 136, 149, 161, 594 U .S . 295 Aph . Blossom, to - 322 Phr . Blossoming - 75 Aph . Blow - 15th, 27th June ; 20t h July B .o .S 421 U .S . Blow, to - 139 Aph . Blue 659 U .S . Boat 227 U .S . Bodhisattva - 560 - 562 U .S . Bodily - 1st June B .o .S 56 U .S . Body - 6th March ; 28th April ; 4th, 9th May ; 1st June ; 25th July ; 12th Nov . ; 9t h Dec . B .o .S 114, 279, 401, 465, 512 , 520, 549, 632, 657 U .S . 1, 38, 80, 131, 177, 203 , 352 Aph . 5, 25, 31, 35, 61, 67, 86 ,
.
.
.
.
100, 104, 145, 146, 181, 185, 192, 289, 291, 292, 302 - 305, 308, 311, 312, 321, 332, 333, 341 - 343, 347, 351, 355, 35 6 Boldly 354 U .S . Bond 530 U .S . 257 Phr . Book 449 U .S . Boon 449 U .S . Boot(s) - 367 U .S . Born : see Bear, to Both - 8th March ; 9th, 16t h July ; 1st Sept . ; 17th Oct . B .o .S . 54, 60, 197, 381, 387, 448 , 540, 570, 625, 632 U .S . 224, 279, 305, 333 Aph . 84, 231, 256, 367 Phr . Bother, to - 19th Febr . B .O .S . Bottom 289 U .S . Boundary(ies) - 5th July B .O .S . 89 Aph . Bow 650 U .S . Bow, to - 10th Sept . ; 4t h B .O .S . Dec . Bowl - 135, 266, 328 U .S . Brain - 26th Jan . B .o .S . 304, 579, 648 U .S . 47 Aph . Branch(es) - 2nd March B .o .S . 136, 192, 354, 408 U .S . 298 Aph . Brave 338a U .S . Bread 287 Aah . Breadth - 10th Aug . B .O .S .
Break, to - 21st Jan . ; 1s t Febr . ; 23rd June ; 18th July ; 15th Sept . B .O .S . 8, 78, 204, 241, 245, 427 U .S . 44, 94, 152, 234, 342 Aph . Breaker(s) - 17th April B .o .S . Breaking - 31st Oct . B .O .S . 204 U .S . B .o .S . Breath - 26th Jan . 169, 307, 591 U .S . 133, 193 Aph . 334, 338 Phr . Breathe, to - 44 Aph . Breed, to - 381 U .S . Breeze - 306, 307, 368 U .S . Bridge - 12th April B .o .S . 200, 340 Aph . Bright 4 U .S . 234 Aph . Brighten, to - 82, 270 Phr . Brightness - 322 Aph . Brilliance - 201 Aph . Brilliant - 201 Aph . Bring, to - 9th Febr . ; 3rd March ; 7th May ; 25th, 27th June ; 2nd, 23rd July ; 2nd Nov . B .o .S . 24, 107, 115, 130, 138 , 154, 193, 218, 236, 237, 262, 275, 284, 305, 307, 337, 354, 368, 374, 400 , 452, 527, 608, 645 U .S . 20, 23, 61, 97, 105, 238 , 273, 281, 287, 316 Aoh . 84, 172, 229, 254, 344 , 346 Phr . Broad - 3rd June ; 9th Nov . B .o .S . 201 U .S . Brother - 478 U .S . 208, 259 Aph . B .o .S . Brotherhood - 16th Oct . 139, 530, 532, 608 U .S . Brow(s) - 137 U .S . Bud - 22, 149 U .S . Buddha 6 Aph . Buddhism - 659 U .S . Build, to - 5, 59, 120, 624 , 652 U .S . 194, 280 Aph . 270 Phr . Burden - 55, 132, 185, 313 , 539 U .S . 74 Aoh . Burn, to - 22nd June B .o .S . 181, 281, 388 U .S . Bury, to - 367 U .S . 228 Aph . Bushel - 6th March ; 9th May B .o .S . Busy - 109, 262 Aph . Busy, to - 262, 541 U .S . 279
280 (cont . Busy, to) 311
Aph .
Butter - 63 Buy, to - 194
U .S . U .S .
Cage - 137
U .S .
18
Aph .
Call - 24th Jan ; 1st March ;
2nd Oct . 93, 138, 139, 534, 583 158, 272 199
(cont . Cause ) 477, 554, 572, 643
30, 38, 67, 94 - 128, 338 Cause, to - 2nd Febr . ; 30th May ; 21st June ; 4th, 23rd
Phr .
July B .o .S . 25, 27, 130, 150, 386, 647 U .S .
13, 328 Cease, to - 16th Jar. .
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr .
U .S .
576, 628 218, 284 Ceaseless - 576 Celestial - 285
Aph . B .O .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S .
Call, to - 24th Jan . ; 25th March ; 12th May ; 25th, 29th June ; 14th July ; 28th, 31st Oct . B .o .S . 374, 447, 478, 480, 586, 609, 630 U .S . 43, 48, 62, 114, 127, 154, 185, 209, 311, 348 Aph .
Center, to - 279 Central - 29th June 485 205 Certain(ly) - 28, 139, 207 , 216, 338, 354, 474, 490 , 586, 608, 647, 660 143, 213, 271, 281
Calling - 158
Aph .
U .S . Aph .
Certainty - 567
U .S .
Calm(ly) - 138, 260 192, 300 Calm, to - 184, 293, 294 Candle(s) - 4th Oct . Capable - 15th June 441, 490, 660
U .S . Phr . Phr . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S .
Chair(s) - 457, 606 Chaitanya - 565 Chamber - 84 205 Chance - 29th Febr . 261, 357, 441
U .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S .
43, 235 305 Capacity - 25th March ; 28th, 31st Oct . 217, 277 261 Capital - 234 Captive - 59 Captivity - 4th April 167 364 Care(s) - 16th July 285, 415, 549 203 Care, to - 28th Nov . 376 170 Careful - 17th July Caress - 421 Carpenter - 606 2 Carry out, to - 12th Aug . 188, 299, 386 262 Case(s) - 433, 515 182 Cast, to - 8th Sept . 263 79 Catch, to - 263 Cause - 2nd, 27th Sept . 280
Aph . . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . Anh . U .S . Aoh . B .o .S . Aph . Phr . B .O .S . U .S . Aoh . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph .
B .O .S . U .S . Aph . U .S .
B .O .S .
189
U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph .
Aph .
Change - 28th April ; 25th June B .o .S . 625 U .S . 333 Aph . Change, to - 18th Febr . ; 16th March ; 30th June ; 4th Aug . B .o .S . 13, 14, 181, 239, 452, 641 U .S . 166 Phr . Changeability - 6th bec . B .o .S . Changeable - 402 U .S . Changeableness - 6th Dec . B .O .S . Changing - 363 U .S . Channel - 62 Aph . 95, 108, 139 Phr . Character(s) - 30th April ; 13th Sept . ; 29th Dec . B .O .S . 88, 156, 191, 241, 252 , 319 U .S . 43, 194, 274, 277 Aph . 78, 249 Phr . Characteristic(s) - 2nd Aug . B .o .S . 580 U .S . Charge, to - 26th Jan . B .o .S . 77 U .S . 163 Phr . Charity - 71 U .S . Charm - 476, 491 U .S . Charming - 368 U .S . Chastity - 241 U .S . Check, to - 22nd May B .o .S .
28 1
Cheerfulness - 220 Chief - 16th Jan . 240, 560 Child, Children - 7th Nov . 139, 148, 198, 381, 467, 528 170 55 Childlike - 27th Febr . Chill - 98 Choice - 630 Choose, to - 23rd Dec . 165, 627, 630, 645 116 Christ - 12th May ; 27th Aug . ; 16th Dec . 54, 139, 140, 500, 640 6, 205, 275, 300 Christhood - 54, 454 Christian - 658 Christianity - 659 Chum, to - 67 Church(es) - 2nd March 438 107 Circle - 30th Dec . 221 Circulation - 595 Circumstance(s) - 12th June 322, 348 City - 14th Aug . 397 Civilization - 224 65 Clad, to - 19th Jan . Claim(s) - 7th March ; 6th July 54, 55, 141, 312 118, 181 Claim, to - 141, 312, 513 Claimant - 454 Clean - 29th Aug . Clear(ly) - 29th Aug . ; 3rd Dec . 449, 468 139, 349 130, 169, 188, 189, 252, 261, 279, 295, 298 Clear, to - 31st Jan . ; 4th Sept . 269, 276 Clearness - 31st Oct . 468 Clever - 33, 35a, 148, 221, 353 Cleverness - 20th Aug . Climb, to - 173 Cling, to - 352 153 Close(ly) - 26th March ; 22nd
Aoh• B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Anh . B .o•S• U .S . Anh . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph .
B .o .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . Aph• B .o .S .
B .O .S . U .S . Aoh . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . S .o•S• U .S . Aph .
Phr . B .o .S . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . Aoh . U .S .
Aph .
(cont . Close(ly)) Oct .
B .o .S .
U .S . 151, 626 Aph . 86, 151 Phr . 260, 328 Close, to - 6th March ; 31s t B .o .S . July 81, 134, 233, 328, 381 , U .S . 526, 583, 595 103, 320 Aph . U .S . Clothes - 202 Clothe, to - 202 U .S . cloud(s) - 23rd March ; 18th B .O .S . July ; 31st Oct . 20, 214, 229, 234, 312 , Aph . 320, 342 Phr . 213 Cloud, to - 229 Aph . B .O .S . Coat - 25th July Coin - 17th Aug . B .o .S . Cold - 23rd July ; 15th Sept . B .o .S . U .S . 108 Cold-hearted - 93 Aph . Coldness - 6th March ; 15th B .o .S . Sept . 622 U .S . Collaborator - 221 U .S . B .o .S . Collect, to - 31st Aug . 194, 343 Aph . U .S . Collective(ly) - 92, 502 344 Aph . U .S . Collectivity - 502 Colour(s) - 338, 461, 462 . 531, 641, 659 U .S . Aph . 67, 86, 218, 255, 322 Come, to - 22nd, 23rd, 24t h Jan . ; 18th, 21st Febr . ; 10th April ; 25th May ; 15t h June ; 7th, 25th July ; 2n d Oct . ; 23rd Nov . ; 11th Dec . B .o .S . 87, 106, 107, 138, 139 , 161, 167, 205, 211, 215 , 259, 273, 289, 306, 338a , 354, 386, 477, 478, 523 , 540, 557, 562, 570, 583 , 594, 595, 599, 624, 629 , 642 U .S . 32, 36, 46, 53, 64, 72, 89 , 92, 93, 112, 115, 141, 144 , 145, 156, 165, 192, 197 , 218, 225, 232, 234, 238 , 239, 271, 284, 285, 287 , 294, 307, 311, 312, 320 , 324, 329, 335, 342 Aph . 90, 229, 231 Phr . B .o .S . Comfort - 20th July 11, 137, 279, 452 U .S . Phr . 336 Comfortable - 25th April B .O .S . U .S . Coming - 138 U .S . Commencement - 638 281
28 2 Comment(s) - 630 Commercial - 224 Commit, to - 588 Common - 188 Commune, to - 10th July
U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S .
Communicate, to - 199 Community - 173
Aph . Aph .
Comparatively - 454
U .S .
Compare, to - 16th May
B .o .S .
473, 630
U .S .
88, 127, 287
Aph .
Comparison - 473 307 Compass - 227 Compassion - 137, 299 324, 349 51 Compassionate - 463 Compel, to - 348 Compete, to - 5 Complete - 12th Jan . 192, 563, 625 61, 191, 366, 367, 370
U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Phr .
Complete, to - 7, 8, 39, 73 , 119, 190, 344, 365, 368 , 369 Complexity - 20th Aug . ; 6th Oct . ; 19th Dec . 142 Compose, to - 23rd June
Phr . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S .
Composer - 338
Aph .
Composition - 338 Comprehend, to - 458 Comprehension - 207, 448 Comrade(s) - 221, 381 Conceit - 308, 504 Conceive, to - 139, 330 Concentrate, to - 629 Concentration - 17th Febr . 500, 629 Conception - 330 36, 124 Concern - 627 Concern, to - 271, 326, 624 338
Aph . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S .
B .O .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . Aph .
Condition(s) - 5th June ; 2n d Aug . ; 4th Dec . 51, 86, 483, 625 20, 24, 102, 122, 156, 224 , 232, 254, 350 28, 34, 43, 62, 81, 101 , 280, 364 Conduct - 11th June Confess, to - 40 Confidence - 216, 285, 468 , 511 17 220 Conform - 16th Jan .
282
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . ADh . Phr . B .o .S .
Confusion - 304
U .S .
328 Congestion - 150, 485, 595
Aph . U .S .
Connect, to - 12th April
B .o .S .
85, 177, 200, 298 255, 256 Connection - 19th July 593
56, 298
Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S .
Aph .
Conquer, to - 25th Febr . ;
17th March
B .o .S .
584 269 Conquest - 25th Febr .
U .S . Aph . B .o .S .
Conscience - 29th Aug .
B .o .S .
31, 36 Conscientious - 180 Conscious(ly) - 24th Febr . ; 9th May 145, 200, 501, 503, 604 , 625 158, 170, 175, 223, 299 ,
Aph . U .S .
321 Consciousness - 3rd, 25th , 28th, 29th Nov . 110, 284, 571, 604, 605 ,
B .o .S . U .S .
Aph . B .o .S .
625, 657, 658
U .S .
4, 161, 162, 313, 314
Aph .
85
Phr .
Consequence(s) - 9th July B .o .S . Conservative - 485 U .S . Consider, to - 29th Febr . ; 22nd July ; 23rd, 31st Dec . B .o .S . 21, 91, 128, 261, 334, 355 ,
387, 441, 443, 585, 596 , 620, 630 102, 114 Considerable - 182 Considerate - 200, 413 Consideration - 26th Aug . 530, 610 Consolation - 137 Console, to - 151, 152 Consoler - 551 Constancy - 25th June Constant(ly) - 25th, 28th June ; 2nd, 16th Dec . 77, 191, 381, 443, 454 189 Constructive - 5 Consult, to - 106 Consume, to - 132, 201 Contact - 386 Contain, to - 453 104, 131 Contemplate, to - 471 161 Contemplation - 17th Febr . ; 3rd Nov .
U .S . Aph . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . Phr . U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . Aoh . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . B .o .S .
28 3 (cont . Contemplation) 516, 540 Contempt - 6th March
U .S . B .o .S .
272 Contemptible - 239 Content(ment) - 519
U .S . U .S . U .S .
205 Continual(ly) - 5th Aug . ; 16th Dec . 181, 336, 443, 653
Phr . B .o .S . U .S .
43, 84, 102, 109, 134, 189, 307, 311, 350 Aph . Continue, to - 147, 227, 478, 494, 568
352 Contradiction - 113 Contrary - 277, 524
102, 333 Contribution - 109
(cont . Cover(s) ) 537 1, 155 Cover, to - 23rd March ; 9th May ; 23rd July ; 31st Oct . 15, 167, 354
18, 20, 90, 210, 229, 309
U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S .
Aph .
Covering - 14th May Crack, to - 617 Cradle - 350
B .o .S . U .S . U .S .
Craving - 42 Create, to - 5th March ; 2nd
Aph .
U .S .
July ; 19th Sept . ; 30th Nov .
Aph .
8, 184, 189, 197, 230, 240 ,
Aph . U .S .
340, 462, 492, 606 34, 54, 57, 120, 143, 208 ,
U .S .
Aph .
213, 268, 274
Aph .
Aph .
87, 165
Phr .
B .O .S .
Creation(s) - 3rd July ; 27th
Control - 12th Jan . ; 28th May ; 12th Nov . 64, 330
B .o .S . U .S .
Sept . 197, 387, 405, 461, 485 ,
B .o .S .
26
Aph .
560, 634, 639
U .S .
100, 206, 208
Phr .
70, 92, 122, 127, 204, 311 ,
326
Control, to - 5th May ; 13th
Aph .
U .S . Aph .
69 Creative - 283 128, 147
Phr . U .S . Aph .
207, 209, 363 Controller - 337
Phr . Aph .
Creator(s) - 6th June 116, 208
B .o .S . Aph .
Convenience - 455 Convention(s) - 5th July
U .S . B .o .S .
Creature - 174 91
U .S . Aph .
Conventionality - 59
Aph .
Creed(s) - 21st Oct .
B .o .S .
Convey, to - 70, 122 Conviction - 240 Cook, to - 629 Cool, to - 629 Cooperation - 570 Cope, to - 319, 586 Correct, to - 17 Cost - 7th Aug . ; 24th Sept .
Aph . Aph . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S .
608 Crescent - 287, 650 Critic - 144 Critical - 324 Criticism(s) - 381 Crop - 21st Febr . Cross - 54, 491, 500, 594 264
U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph .
Aph .
Cross, to - 16th Dec .
B .o .S .
U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S .
206 Crowd - 396 Crown - 19th Jan . 153
U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
Aph .
Crown, to - 19th Jan .
B .o .S .
U .S .
164, 561 265 Crucifixion - 9th Jan . Crucify, to - 9th Jan . 54, 140 Cruel - 18, 44, 374 Crush, to - 374 Cry - 92, 502 Cry, to - 199 Crystal - 533 Culminate, to - 519 90, 165 Culmination - 141
U .S . Phr .
Nov . 314, 579 26
89 Cost, to - 194, 243, 309 Costly - 484 Counsel - 332 Count, to - 21, 477
24 Countenance - 13, 14 Country - 14th Aug . 143 Couple(s) - 400 Courage - 137, 381, 385 165, 210, 211 Courageous(ly) - 227, 441 Course, of - 206 Court - 140 36 Courtship - 403 Cover(s) - 2nd Jan . ; 20th April
B .O .S .
B .O .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . Phr . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S .
B .O .S . B .O .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . Aph .
283
28 4 Cult - 128 Cultivate , to - 29th Oct .
27
U .S . B .o .S .
Aph .
Culture - 65 Cup - 263 183
Aph . U .S . Phr .
Cure - 639
U .S .
Cure ,
to - 648
Curl - 186 Current - 17th Aug . 619 Curse, to - 2 Customer - 27th Jan . Cut, to - 427
2, 64
Danger - 352 ,
381, 485
Dark - 310 Darken, to - 386 Darkness - 18th, 21st June ; 31st Oct . 84, 287, 300 , 386, 552 81, 234 Date, to - 204 Dawn - 227
108
Nov .
B .O .S .
73, 90, 296, 317, 481 , 597, 625
U .S .
4, 53, 144, 233, 346 Deepen, to - 64, 181
Aph . U .S .
Aph . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
Deep-felt - 347
Aph .
Defence - 10 Defend, to - 39, 191
U .S . U .S .
Definite - 26th June ; 7th
U .S . Aph .
July Definition - 658 Degeneration - 608 Degree - 19th Aug . 111, 158 Deism - 128 Deity - 11th April
U .S . U .S . B .o .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S .
B .O .S .
U .S .
Delicacy - 199, 255
Aph .
U .S . U .S .
Delicate - 651
U .S .
Delight - 279 Deliver, to - 95, 139
U .S . Phr .
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S .
Delude, to - 28th July B .o .S . Demand(s) - 344 Aph . Demand, to - 27th Jan . ; 28th June ; 24th Sept . B .o .S . 53, 296, 329 U .S . Democracy - 21st May B .o .S . 123 U .S .
Aph .
587, 588
U .S .
32, 38, 80, 112 , 154, 155 , 157, 220, 226 , 234, 245 , 308, 311, 333, 335, 351
Aph .
288
Phr .
Decay - 604 Deceit - 381 Decline, to - 273
U .S .
Aph . Phr .
Day - 17th Febr . B .o .S 21, 204 , 227, 423 , 449, 478 , 534, 557, 625 , 630, 652 U .S . 17, 32, 55, 149, 199, 225 Aoh . 14, 22, 62, 65 , 120, 128 , 143, 188, 203 , 214, 219 , 327 Phr . Daylight - 4 U .S . 234 Aph . Dead - 7th April ; 8th May ; 22nd Aug . B .o .S 220, 452 U .S . 307 Aph . Deadness - 21st June B .o .S Deal, to - 2nd Nov . B .o .S Dear - 2nd Oct . B .o .S 116 Aph . 5, 32, 102, 253 Phr . Death - 25th July ; 28th Aug . ; 9th Dec . B .o .S 145, 146, 220, 290, 385 ,
284
651
Aph .
Cycle - 561 324
Phr .
Dedicate, to - 149 Phr . Deed(s) - 25, 107, 147, 585 , Deep - 5th May ; 2nd, 29th
U .S .
209 185
Decorative - 92
U .S . U .S . U .S .
.
Denseness - 168 Deny, to - 30th March ; 8th
Aph .
Nov . ; 6th, 20th Dec . 300 Depart, to - 285
B .o .S . Aph . U .S .
Depend, to - 18th April ; 8t h May ; 11th June 89, 453, 508, 633 .
. . .
.
B .o .S . U .S .
Dependable - 508
U .S .
Dependant - 13th Febr . 160 Depression - 647 221, 328 212, 213, 359 Deorive, to - 345, 493 91, 196, 321 Depth(s) - 16th, 17th Aoril ; 3rd Sept . ; 12th Oct . ; 2nd , 30th Nov . ; 14th Dec . 73, 217, 597
B .o .S . U .S . U .S . Aoh . Phr . U .S . Aph .
1, 15, 35, 42, 233, 317 Derive, to - 592
Aph U .S .
Descend, to - 103, 237 Desert - 320 Desert, to - 204 Deserve, to - 16th Sept . 156, 223, 517 Design - 271
U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S .
B .O .S . U .S .
28 5 Design, to - 12th Aug .
B .o .S .
Aph . 207 B .o .S . Desirable - 23rd May Desire(s) - 25th Jan . ; 20th Febr . ; 23rd, 27th May ; 1st , 25th June ; 21st Oct . ; 21s t B .O .S . Dec . 56, 227, 382, 525 14, 20, 136, 153
101
U .S . Aph . Phr .
Desire, to - 4th, 16th April ; B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . Aph .
B .O .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Anh . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S .
U .S . 61, 581, 582, 646 16, 105, 201, 255, 271, 324 , 341 Development - 21st Sept . 125, 541 16, 26, 345 Devil - 57, 148, 463 Devote, to - 10th May 148 129 Devotee(s) - 4th Febr . ; 19th March ; 17th, 18th June ; 29th July 120, 515, 637 275
Aph . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S .
B .O .S . Aph . Phr .
B .O .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S , Aph .
B .O .S . U .S . Aph .
Difficult - 12th Febr . ; 22nd Dec . 8, 37, 54, 58, 120, 124 143, 299, 350 Difficulty(ies) - 3rd Aug . ; 30th Oct . 90 214 - 216 Dig, to - 2nd Nov .
228, 233 Digest, to - 319 Digger - 386 Dignity - 108 Dim - 20 Dim, to - 23rd March ; 31s t Oct . Diminish, to - 96 Direct(ly) - 326, 627
154 Direct, to - 3rd May ; 18th Sept . ; 10th Nov . 84, 207, 326, 427
135 Direction(s) - 12th Jan . 152, 209 146 167, 171, 234, 269, 271 273, 275, 276 Dirt - 289 Disagree, to - 318 Disagreement - 108 Disappear, to - 214, 312 Disappoint, to - 18th Febr . 84, 275 Disappointment - 1st May 59, 177
68 B .o .S . U .S . Aph .
Devotion - 4th, 5th Febr . ; 17th June ; 10th July ; 14th Sept . ; 19th Nov . 107, 181, 308, 330, 492b , 516, 517, 554, 572, 615 Dewdrops - 149 Diamond - 20 64 Die, to - 146, 220 308, 311 Diet - 468 Difference(s) - 30th may 400, 530 12
563, 608, 646, 660 2, 92, 104, 177, 232, 236 , 272
36, 37, 568
12th May ; 2nd July ; 10t h Nov . 398, 453, 492, 540 135 202 Despair - 20th Oct . Destin, to - 202 Destination - 10th June ; : 5th Aug . Destiny - 488, 571 Destroy, to - 5, 89, 608, 652 208 Destructive - 5 145 Detach, to - 12th June 381 Detachment - 170 Detail - 372 De-throne, to - 10th Jan . Develop, to - 2nd, 13th Dec .
Different - 20th Dec . 94, 209, 374, 400, 490 ,
Disbelief - 27th July 20 Disbelieve, to - 346 Disciple(s) - 528, 640, 646 216, 217, 320 Discipleship - 516, 527 Disclose, to - 450 Discomfort(s) - 452 158, 192 Disconnect, to - 152, 321 Discontent(ment) - 329, 519 Discord - 23rd June Discourage, to - 477 Discover, to - 9th March ; 25th June 59, 492 127, 148, 267
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S .
U .S . Aph . Phr .
B .O .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . Aph . U .S .
Aph . B .o .S . U .S .
Phr . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
Aph . B .o .s . Aph . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . 285
286 Discovering - 59, 361 U .S . Discussion - 24th May B .o .S . Disease - 221 Aph . Disfavour, to - 451 U .S . Dish 30 U .S . Disharmony - 5th March ; 18th April ; 30th May B .o .S . Dishearten, to - 452 U .S . Disillusion, to - 28th July B .O .S . Disinclination - 267 U .S . Disincline, to - 267 U .S . Disorder - 150 U .S . Disown, to - 42 Aph . Dispassion - 522 U .S . Disperse, to - 214 . Aph . Displease, to - 180, 375, 451 U .S . Displeasure - 24th Febr . B .o .S . 60 Aph . Dispute(s) - 218 Aph . Dispute, to - 275 Aph . Disregard, to - 29th Febr . ; 26th June B .o .S . 261 U .S . Dissatisfaction - 165 Aph . Distance(s) - 7, 130, 151 , 381 U .S . Distinction(s) - 530 U .S . 215 Aph . Distinguish, to - 330, 360a , 450 U .S . 28 Aph . Disturb, to - 23rd June B .o .S . Ditch 386 U .S . Dive, to - 30th June B .o .S . 73, 625 U .S . 53, 346 Aph . Diverse - 23rd Dec . B .o .S . Divide, to - 1st Jan ; 27t h July B .O .S . 256 U .S . Divine - 8th, 18th April ; 9th , 29th Sept . ; 20th Oct . B .o .S . 74, 92, 94, 139, 183, 192 , 210, 230, 240, 449, 468, 475, 502, 569, 635, 638 , 653 U .S . 16, 35, 66, 67, 72, 73, 83 , 90, 133, 141, 142, 154, 161, 201, 204, 210, 229, 272 , 302, 323 - 325, 341, 352 Aph . 1, 2, 19, 21, 26, 30, 36 , 38, 54, 75, 76, 82, 83, 92, 95 - 103, 106, 109 - 114, 117 - 119, 121 - 127, 129, 131, 132, 134 - 139, 150, 155, 161 - 164, 181 - 183, 187, 191, 196, 206, 209, 217, 224, 235, 238 - 240, 242, 247, 248, 253, 259, 260, 262, 281, 282, 284, 286
(cont . Divine) 285, 301, 309, 313, 328, 338, 341, 342, 347, 349 - 353, 356 , 358, 361 Phr . Divinity - 454 U .S . 300 Aph . Djinn(s) - 500 U .S . 92 Aph . Do, to - 18th Febr . ; 20th June ; 6th Sept . ; 12th, 31s t Dec . B .o .S . 3, 4, 22, 25, 71, 85, 126 , 137, 156,'163, 164, 173, 191, 272, 348, 371, 377, 382, 393, 417, 424, 426, 427, 435, 441, 451, 467, 477, 478, 511, 548, 570 ,
575, 648 U .S . 106, 174, 193, 221, 250 , 262 Aph . 148, 198 Phr . Doctor - 209 Aph . Doctrine - 317 Aph . Dogma 492 U .S . Doing(s) - 247 U .S . Doll 624 U .S . Dollar(s) - 605 U .S . Dome - 15th Febr . B .o .S . Domestic - 224 U .S . Dominate, to - 76 U .S . Domineer, to - 221 U .S . Dominion - 299 U .S . Door(s) - 6th March ; 15t h June ; 31st July ; 17th Sept . ; 4th, 5th Nov . B .o .S . 516 U .S . 226 Aph . 173, 174, 268 Phr . Doubt(s) - 316, 381, 542 , 568 U .S . Doubt, to - 3rd March B .o .S . Down - 1st June ; 8th Sept . B .o .S . 56, 167, 192, 222, 287, 289, 313, 366, 370, 409 , 504, 527, 623 U .S . Downfall - 204 U .S . Downwards - 623 U .S . Draw, to - 17th Jan ; 22n d Oct . B .O .S . 177, 255 U .S . 17, 86, 211, 261 Aph . 260, 328 Phi . Dread, to - 488 U .S . 249 Aph . Dream - 16th June B .o .S . 152 U .S . Dream, to - 382 U .S . 274 Aph . Dress 406 U .S . Drink 279 U .S .
28 7 (cont . Earthly )
(cont . Drink) 64
Drink, to - 12th May 135, 263
Phr .
B .O .S . U .S .
128, 381, 530
U .S .
181, 251, 350 Ease - 23
Aph . Aph .
East - 121
Aph .
July ; 8th Oct .
B .o .S .
Eastern - 275, 524
U .S .
446, 503
U .S .
Easy(ily) - 21st Jan .
B .o .S .
Drop(s) - 1st Jan . ; 23rd
Aph . U .S . Aph .
Drown, to - 16th Dec . 499 Drunken - 230, 285 Duality - 252 Due - 229
B .o .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S .
Eat, to - 19th Febr . 18, 319, 648 264 Eater - 339 Echo, to - 29th Nov .
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S .
During - 338, 586 244
U .S . Aph . B .O .S .
273 Ecstasy - 107, 307
Aph . U .S .
U .S .
261 Eden, the garden of - 260
Aph . Aph .
Dust - 4th March 4, 370
8, 58, 120, 346, 398 22 56, 171, 225, 226
U .S . Aph . Phr .
292 Drop, to - 167, 198, 313 298
U .S .
Education - 160
U .S .
102, 164, 223, 250, 313, 319
U .S .
Aph .
Educational - 224 Effect - 28th April ; 23rd
218
Phr .
Duty(ies) - 356, 501, 505
Dweller - 16th July 415 Dynamite - 1st Febr .
B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S .
122, 338a, 458, 563 180, 262 62, 214 Eachother - 5th July ; 1st Sect . Eagerly - 469
B .O .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S .
Efficient - 299 Effort(s) - 2nd, 10th July ;
Aph .
265 Ego(s) - 3rd July 62, 164, 492, 514, 537 ,
630 101, 278 Element(s) - 150, 362 105, 156 Elevate, to - 21st May ; 3rd June ; 9th Nov .
343
Ear(s) - 5th April ; 8th May ; 17th Nov . 195, 233, 274 Earn, to - 294 Earth - 3rd, 6th, 23rd March ; 25th July ; 9th, 11th Aug . ; 31st Oct . 4, 55, 73, 107, 115, 120, 137, 153 - 159, 167, 183, 190, 192, 198, 222, 255, 287, 289, 302, 313, 329,
U .S . Aph . U .S .
61, 608
Febr . ; 25th May ; 23rd,
B .o .S . U .S . Anh .
B .o .S .
Eloquence - 38 Else - 31st March ; 1st April 164, 247, 375, 629, 648 307 182 Embarras, to - 320 Embodiment - 276 Eminence - 150 Emotion(s) - 28th April ; 26th Aug .
296
381, 398, 453, 454, 527,
Empty - 28th March ; 22nd , 26th Nov . 575 Empty, to - 536 Enable, to - 629 346
551, 591 5, 24, 54, 56, 59, 61, 68, 86, 91, 156, 211, 229, 233, 240, 244, 258, 264, 276, 279, 298, 301, 311, 321, 333
U .S .
195, 250, 281, 363
Phr .
38, 96, 98 - 100, 103, 105 ,
B .o .S .
110, 120, 122, 124, 127 , 131, 132, 134, 137, 148,
Earthly - 23rd, 25th March ; 28th, 31st Oct .
Aph .
B .o .S .
319 9, 339 Effective - 477
4th, 16th Dec .
Each - 12th, 15th Jan . ; 20th 29th June ; 7th, 15th July ; 1st Sept . ; 1st, 12th Oct . ; 23rd Dec .
July
B .O .S . U .S . Phr . B .o .S .
U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph .
B .O .S . Phr . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . U .S . Phr . B .o .S .
Phr . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph .
287
288 (cont . Enable, to) 187, 237 , 274, 331 Phr . End - 161, 205, 405, 477, 529 , 649
U .S .
24, 41, 68, 163, 270 Aph . End, to - 162, 181, 198, 297 , 333, 519, 568 U .S . Endeavour - 28th June B .O .S . Endless - 227 U .S . 327 Aph . Endurance - 217, 514
U .S .
Endure, to - 13th Sept . '181, 381, 554
B .O .S . U .S .
Enemy(ies) - 25th Jan .
B .o .S .
175, 176, 334, 432, 599 Energetic - 219
U .S . Phr .
Energy - 23rd Febr . 599
B .o .S . U .S .
Enfoldment - 75
Phr .
Engage, to - 541 Engineer - 152
U .S . U .S .
337
Aph .
English - 586 U .S . Engrave, to - 169 U .S . 210 Aph . Enjoy, to - 12, 138, 381, 472 U .S . 28, 176 Aph . 144 Phr . Enlarge, to - 17 U .S .
Enlighten, to - 16th Aug .
B .o .S .
45 Enlightenment - 518 Enmity - 601 Enough - 30th March ; 12th June
Aph . U .S . U .S .
110, 338a, 581, 599, 622 233 209 Enrich, to - 228 Enshrine, to - 120 Enslave, to - 279 Enter, to - 7th Febr . ; 28th June 134, 232, 591, 628
80, 157, 322
B .O .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . Phr . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
Aph .
Enthusiasm - 147 210, 211 Enthusiastic - 219 Entirely - 575 92, 230 127 Entrance - 530
Aph . Phr . Phr . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S .
Enviable - 5th Dec .
B .o .S .
239, 250 Envigorate, to - 239 Environment(s) - 374, 452 Envy - 3rd Aug .
U .S . Phr . U .S .
Envy, to - 3rd Aug . 272 288
B .O .S . B .o .S . U .S .
Equal(ly) - 4th May ; 24th July B .o .S . 563 U .S . Equilibrium - 191 Aph . Erase , to - 270 Phr . Err, to - 441 U .S . Error(s) - 5th Nov . B .O .S . 39, 59, 361, 441, 617 U .S . Escape, to - 1st May B .O .S . Esoteric - 139 U .S . Especially - 103, 408 U .S . 170 Aph . Essence - 3rd, 13th Febr . ;
23rd Nov . B .o .S . 63, 468, 510, 562 U .S . 13, 159, 210, 256, 283 , 332 Aph . Essential - 3rd July B .O .S . 360a U .S . Establish, to - 222 Aph . Esteem 126 U .S . Eternal - 27th May ; 29th June ; 17th Sept . B .O .S . 625 U .S . 241 Aph . Eternity - 625 U .S . Ether 150 U .S . Eva 398 U .S . Even - 1st Febr . ; 31st March ; 22nd July B .o .S . 54, 62, 67, 71, 85, 91 , 121, 124, 157, 188, 205, 329, 334, 354, 375, 438, 452, 457, 466, 500, 515 , 524, 585, 589, 627 U .S . 102, 193, 302, 331, 351 Aph . Ever - 19th, 21st Jan . ; 12th May ; 19th July ; 31st Aug . B .o .S . 2, 125, 181, 183, 462, 569 , 634 U .S . 132, 214 Aph . 107 Phr . Ever-changing - 23rd Nov . B .o .S . Ever creating - 462 U .S . Everduring - 461 U .S . Ever-floating - 312 Aph . Ever-forgiving - 4th Nov . B .O .S . 191 U .S . Everlasting - 118 U .S . Ever-living - 13th Sept . B .o .S . Evermore - 569 U .S . Ever-moving - 16th Dec . B .O .S . 559 U .S . Ever-rising - 53, 346 Aph . Every - 561, 564, 566, 581 , 592, 624, 633, 647 - 649 U .S . 32, 33, 43, 55, 58, 60, 64, 69, 75, 90, 95, 131, 142 , 149, 153, 157, 207, 225 ,
28 9 (cont . Every) 235, 248, 261, 262, 270, 302, 317, 322 , 327, 337, 338, 341, 352 Aph . 4 - 6, 8, 10, 14, 19, 22 , 23, 27 - 29, 33, 41 - 44, 51, 53, 62, 64, 65, 73, 110, 112, 120, 143, 167, 171, 187, 203, 209, 214, 219 , 234, 269, 271 - 276, 327 Phr . Everybody - 27th May B .o .S . 386 U .S . Everyone - 22nd, 27th May ; 16th Oct . B .o .S . 122, 210 U .S . 167, 222 Aph . Everything - 28th May ; 10th Oct . B .o .S . 48, 164, 275, 292, 342 , 376, 453, 629 U .S . 28, 43, 77, 106, 119, 179 , 180 Aph . Everywhere - 143, 518, 621 U .S . 143, 279 Aph . 173, 174 Phr . Evil(s) - 6th Febr . ; 4th Dec . B .o .S . 5, 106, 163, 289, 381, 443 , 620 U .S . 124, 125, 312 Aph . Evolution - 10th, 16th, 29t h March ; 23rd May ; 15th July ; 8th, 10th Aug . ; 1st, 27t h Oct . B .o .S . 209, 229, 338a, 374, 586 U .S . 111, 191, 248, 261, 329 Aph . Evolve, to - 15th July ; 8th Aug . B .o .S . 521 U .S . 111, 306 Aph . Exaggerate, to - 88 U .S . Exaggeration - 5th Oct . B .o .S . Exalt, to - 108, 286 Aph . 121 Phr . Exaltation - 238 Aph . Examination - 333 U .S . Examine, to - 334, 547 U .S . 345 Aph . Example - 18th Aug . B .O .S . 341 U .S . Excel, to - 120 U .S . Except - 22nd June B .o .S . 34, 115, 381, 453, 454 U .S . 171, 244, 336 Aph . Excess 595 U .S . Exchange, to - 29th April B .o .S . Exclusive - 500 U .S . B'.o .S . Excuse - 18th Aug . 332 Aoh . Exercise - 648 U .S . Exhale, to - 51 Aph . Exile 260 Aoh .
Exist, to - 13th July ; 6th Dec . B .o .S . 290, 367, 448, 512, 605 U .S . 113, 125, 160, 189, 339 Aph . Existence - 13th July B .o .S . 124, 160, 176 Aph . Expand, to - 21st Jan ; 23rd July ; 26th Dec . B .o .S . 120, 181, 299, 444, 615 U .S . 280 Aph . 262, 324, 329 Phr . Expansion - 17th May B .o .S . 500 U .S . 167 Phr . Expect, to - 18th Febr . ; 6th Sept . B .o .S . 246, 275, 383 U .S . 40, 68 Aph . Experience(s) - 23rd Jan . ; 16th June ; 5th Aug . ; 29th Dec . B .o .S . 531, 576 U .S . 28, 30, 231, 236 Aph . 143 Phr . Experience, to - 30th Jan . ; 11th Febr . ; 7th May ; 14th June ; 19th July ; 23rd Aug . ; 1st Sept . ; 11th, 24th Nov . B .o .S . 279, 658 U .S . 28, 193, 203, 236 Aph . 144 Phr . Expire, to - 494 U .S . Explain, to - 86, 372, 506 , 531 U .S . B .o .S . Explanation - 10th Jan . 526, 531 U .S . Explorer - 364 U .S . Express, to - 24th Nov . B .o .S . 32, 98, 112, 202, 306, 330 , 334, 547, 595, 639 U .S . 13, 76, 297, 345, 349 Aph . 92 Phr . Expression(s) - 64, 82, 262 , 317, 468 U .S . 15 Aph . 331 Phr . Exquisite - 285 U .S . Extend, to - 134, 192 U .S . Extension - 64 U .S . Extent - 25th Nov . B .O .S . 62, 647 U .S . 240 Aph . External - 5th July ; 6th Aug. ; 24th Nov . B .o .S . 253, 628 U .S . Extraneous - 629 U .S . Extreme - 24th July B .o .S . Eye(s) - 26th Jan . ; 4th, 20th March ; 6th, 21st April ; 2nd, 8th May ; 7th, 12th, 289
290 (cont . Eye ( s)) 13th June ; 27th July ; 27th Sept . ; 13th , 17th Nov . B .o .S . 15, 32 , 112, 137, 148, 161 ,
167, 233, 285, 290, 381 , 409, 412, 451, 583, 621 U .S . 212, 230, 244 , 309, 327 , 330 Eye-lid( s) -
Aph . 167 U .S .
Face ( s) - 10th June B .o .S . .13, 14, 289 U .S . 6, 115 Aph . Face, to -4th Jan . B .o .S . 252 Phr . Facilitate, to - 120 U .S . Facility - 112 Phr . Fact( s) - 21st May B .o .S . 59, 219, 273, 290 U .S . 304 Aph . Faculty( ies) - 456, 630 U .S . 27 Aph . Fade, to - 218 , 322 Aph . Fail, to - 25th Febr . ; 30th May B .o .S . 84, 425, 477 U .S . Failure(s) - 22nd Jan ; 25th Febr . ; 18th April ; 30th May ; 7th Aug . ; 20th, 24th Dec . B .O .S . 35, 442, 489 U .S . 351 Aph . Fairness 139 Aph. . Fairy( ies) 4 U .S . Faith - 27th Febr . ; 5th July ; 25th Aug . B .o .S . 181, 227, 381, 453, 477 , 554, 556, 568 , 572, 582 , 636, 646 U .S . 26, 60, 107, 136, 205, 220 Phr . Faithful - 191 U .S . Fall - 9th July B .o .S . 298 U .S . 4 Aph . Fall, to - 1st, 4th Jan . ; 4th March ; 19th April ; 29th June ; 9th, 28th Sept . ; 8th Oct . ; 7th, 16th Nov . B .o .S . 263, 287, 313, 326, 386 , 441, 454, 514, 553 U .S . 36, 152, 215, 320 Aph . False - 9th Jan . ; 7th March ; 21st April ; 23rd Sept . B .o .S . 59, 172, 287, 355, 450, 492 , 513 U .S . 8, 154, 259, 278 Aoh . Falsehood - 23rd Febr . B .o .S . 355, 357 U .S . Fame - 20th June B .o .S .
290
Family 262 U .S . Fana - 275, 522 U .S . Fancy, to - 6th Dec . B .o .S . Far (Afar) (Further) - 16t h Febr . ; 14th May ; 1st June ; 8th Aug . B .o .S . 56, 101, 113, 177, 296 ,
381, 504, 579 U .S . 27, 33, 89, 96, 218, 247 , 297, 299, 331, 351 Aph . Fascinating - 148 U .S . Fast - 16th May B .o .S . 222, 352 U .S . Fast, to - 107 U .S . Fatalist - 457 U .S . Fate - 17th Jan . B .o .S . Fathom, to - 454 U .S . Fault(s) - 4th June ; 19th Aug . B .o .S . 33, 39, 65, 164, 165, 191 , 208, 409, 410, 432, 541 , 588 U .S . 332, 349 Aph . Favour(s) - 24th Sept . B .o .S . 166 U .S . Favour, to - 451 U .S . 132 Phr . Favourable - 280 Phr . Fazal - 27 - 29, 34, 66 - 68 Phr . Fear - 12th Dec . B .o .S . 127, 167, 381, 385 U .S . 79, 80, 226, 244, 336, 342 Aph . 11, 70, 212, 359 Phr . Fear, to - 24th Febr . ; 12th Dec . B .o .S . 180, 227 U .S . 226, 269 Aph . 185 Phr . Fearless - 352 U .S . 300 Phr . Feebleness - 15th Sept . B .o .S . Feed, to - 18, 62 U .S . Feel, to - 31st July ; 27th Sept . B .o .S . 143, 222, 296, 442 U .S . 64, 76, 10 18 , 143, 192, 225 Aph . 203, 219, 353 Phr . Feeling(s) - 6th, 19th March ; 2nd June ; 12th, 20th July ; 14th, 30th Nov . B .o .S . 98, 181, 252, 468, 499 , 651 U .S . 34, 60, 64, 65, 352 Aph . 296 Phr . Fellow(s) - 191 U .S . Fellow being(s) - 237 Phr . Fellowman - 3rd Aug . B .o .S . 168, 250 U .S . Fertilize, to - 234 U .S .
29 1 Few - 231, 449, 454, 654 U .S . 174 Aph . Fifth 94 U .S . Fight - 60, 599 U .S . Fight, to - 76, 124, 338a , 381, 443, 599, 620 U .S . 190, 269 Aph . Figure 387 U .S . Fikar 169 U .S . Fill, to - 25th, 31st March ;
1st April ; 10th July ; 28th Oct . B .o .S . 285, 569, 575 U .S . 74 Aph . 68, 77, 183, 286, 343 Phr . Final - 9th June ; 5th Aug . B .o .S . 505 U .S . 352 Aph . Find, to - 28th Jan . ; 9t h March ; 1st, 24th April ; 30th June ; 25th July ; 11th Aug . ; 10th, 26th, 27th Oct . ; 2nd Nov . B .o .S . 16, 42, 73, 91, 110, 124 , 148, 205, 231, 262, 287, 352, 381, 404, 442, 492, 492a, 505, 541, 616, 617 , 622, 637 U .S . 7, 53, 68, 69, 81, 107, 163, 233, 279, 280, 286, 332 Aph . 161, 201, 287 Phr . Fine - 381, 520, 651 U .S . 76, 255, 297, 328 Aph . B .o .S . Fineness - 13th Sept . 65, 168, 183, 184 Aph . Finish, to - 323, 325 U .S . Fire - 4th Febr . ; 17th, 18th , B .o .S . 27th June ; 26th Aug . 388, 591, 630 U .S . Firm - 65, 426 U .S . First - 7th, 13th, 24th March ; 21st April ; 2nd, 4th July ; 12th Sept . ; 3rd, 8th Nov . B .o .S . 6, 372, 385, 418, 497, 549 , 557, 564 U .S . 172, 190, 202, 203, 254 , 345 Aph . Fish(es) - 26th March B .o .S . Fit, to - 160, 221 U .S . 116, 123 Phr . Five - 94, 150, 362 U .S . Fix, to - 330 Aph . Flame - 11th Jan . ; 18th June ; 26th Aug . B .o .S . 49, 263 U .S . 139 ADh . Flash, to - 27th June B .o .S . Flavour 30 U .S . Float, to - 4 U .S' . 214 Aph .
(cont . Float, to ) 289
Phr .
Flock(s) - 105 Flood(s) - 170, 499 Floor - 158
Aph . U .S . U .S .
Flourish, to - 8th April
B .o .S .
Flow, to - 1st Jan . ; 30th Sept . 1 Flower(s) - 63, 302, 411 1, 97, 197, 255, 295 Flower, to - 40 Fluid - 629 Flute - 22nd Nov . Fly, to - 4, 313, 656
B .o .S . Phr . U .S . Aph . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
5 Foe(s) - 477 189 Follow, to - 22nd May ; 10th June 40, 242 Follower(s) - 637 Folly - 17, 39 Fondly - 138 Food - 5th Febr . 12, 30, 279, 319, 468, 654 154 64
Aph . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr .
Fool(s) - 40, 171, 226, 298 , U .S . 395 U .S . Fool, to - 168, 171 Foolish(ly) - 19th May ; 12t h B .o .S . Oct . 33, 58, 121, 172, 254, 298 , U .S . 332, 369, 613 Aph . 93 Foot, feet - 45, 156, 157 , U .S . 366, 409, 515 249 Aph • Aph . For (and against) - 300 Forbearance - 5th June B .o .S . U .S . Forbid, to - 15 B .o .S . Force(s) - 9th Febr . 66, 331, 443, 553, 578 , U .S . 620 Aph . 126 Force, to - 201, 422 U .S . Aph . 100 Foreign - 532 U .S . Aph . 156 B .o .S . Forest - 18th Dec . U .S . 192 Aph . 108, 179, 320 Forget, to - 22nd March ; 12th, 26th Sept . ; 30t h B .o .S . Oct . U .S . 230, 270, 334, 425, 503 Aph . 194, 259, 319, 342 Aph . Forgetting - 278 Forgive, to - 16th Oct . B .o .S . 291
292
(cont . Forgive, to ) 70, 267, 334, 478, 543, 554 72, 198 69, 164 Forgiveness - 8th, 18th Febr . 25th May ; 22nd June ; 11th,
U .S . Aph . Phr . ;
12th Sept . 173, 491, 492 b 7 2, 332 Forgive r 33 - 72
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Aph .
Form(s) - 2nd Jan . ; 13th Febr . ; 25th March ; 5th, 28th ,July y: ; 2nd, 22nd, 28th Aug . ; 28th Oct . ; 21st Nov .
B .o . S .
36, 174, 192, 338a, 408, 462, 498, 524, 628 10, 15, 89, 92, 104, 110, 142, 171, 173, 178, 232, 234, 235, 287 Form, to - 28th Jan . ; 14t h Febr . ; 21st May
U .S .
Aph . S .o•S•
276, 338, 362, 374, 387, 404 Formation - 560, 608 Former - 20th Dec . Formless - 242 17 1 171 Fors - 138
Forth - 15th June ; 18th July 540 Fortify, to - 15, 21, 60, 97 , 136, 145, 150, 235, 241, 251, 272, 286, 313
Forward - 16th Oct . 138, 164, 173, 41 4 33 269 Forward, to - 232 Foundation - 99 Fountain - 1st Jan . ; 8th Oct . 452 47 227, 230 Four - 23rd Dec . 94 Fragrance - 1, 67, 255
Fragrant - 277 Free - 8th Jan . ; 18th March 165, 500 279, 318 212, 231, 300, 347, 359 Free, to - 332 121, 217, 259, 296, 364 Freedom - 4th Febr . ; 17th June ; 16th Sept . 345, 470, 490, 493, 517, 596, 66 0 5 96 46 6 193, 236, 279 324 292
U.S U .S B .o U.S Aph
. . .S . .
Aph . B .o .S . U_S.
Phr . B .o .S . U .S .
Aph . Phr • U .S . Aph . B .o .S .
U .S .. U Phphr . B o .S .
U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U.S. Aph Phr . Aph . Phr .
Free will - 82, 83 Aph . Freeze, to - 6th March ; 23r d July B .o .S . Fresh - 468 U .S . Friend(s) - 1st, 19th May ; 4th June ; 29th July ; 30th Oct .
6,
7, 65, 108 ,
B .o .S .
137 ,
175 ,
176, 191, 208, 221, 249 ,
4 77, 54, 62, 451, 469 , 2 2 1, 2023, 207 0 i221, 1 223, 270 Friendless - 352
U .S . UpS . U .S .
Friendly - 249
U .S .
Friendship - 31st May
B .o .S .
7, 8, 181, 191, 267, 491 199, 271 Frighten, to - 19, 452 80 Fruit(s) - 10th Sept . 87, 299, 430 40, 54, 97, 152, 197, 298 32 2 Fruitful - 44 , 234 Fulfil, to - 20th Jan . 227, 561, 563 14, 109, 204, 211, 319 98 10 6, 133 130 5 193 19 5F 2 36, 277, 305 Fulfilling - 311 Fulfilment - 7th July 55, 461, 561, 587
U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . B .o .S .
U .S . Aph . Phr . Phr B .O .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . Aph . B .o .S . UAph .S. Aph .
89, 14 8 Full(y) - 19th July ; 13th , 30th Sept . ; 27th Nov . 12, 41, 118, 202, 273, 506 538, 62 4 67, 154 , 166 , 229 118 Fullness - 93 , 259 Fun - 67 Function, to - 133 Funny - 31 7 Furniture - 11 Further, to - 122 Furtherance - 117 Future - 14th Febr . ; 11th July 94, 271, 443, 626 101, 270
Gab - 3 8
B .O .S . , U .S . Aph .
Phr . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . Phr . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . Phr .
U .S .
B .o .S .
Gain(s) Dec .
U. S . . Phr .
101, 191, 275, 630 Gain, to - 19th, 29th Febr . 216, 261 99, 127, 188, 191, 236 ,
- 30th April ; 29th B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
29 3 ( cont . Gain, to ) 334 Aph . Ganges, the - 30th Sept . ; 25t h Dec . B .o .S . B .o .S . Garb(s) - 2nd, 19th Jan . Garden - 300 U .S . U .S . Gardener - 178 Garment - 25th July B .o .S . 17, 170 U .S . Gate - 28th June B .o .S . 134 U .S . 157 Aph . Gauge , to 191 U .S . Gaze, to - 533 U .S . General (ly) - 160, 363, 527 , 616 U .S . 182, 321 Aph . Generality - 349 U .S . Generosity - 22nd, 23rd Sept . B .o .S . U .S . Generous - 413 Genii 500 U .S . 274 Aph . Gentle ( y) - 137, 306, 368 , 381 U .S . Germ ( s) 604 U .S . 221 Aph . Get, to - 151 , 223, 250, 302 , 492, 627 U .S . Ghost 463 U .S . B .O .S . Gift( s) - 30th Aug . 38, 315 U .S . Give, to - 67, 75, 100, 101 , 105, 113 , 137, 141, 142, 150, 160, 164 , 181, 210, 220, 234, 237 , 245, 247, 250, 253, 293 , 294, 299, 326 , 354, 355, 363 Phr . Giver - 30th Aug . B .o .S . 621 U .S . Glad 368 U .S . Glance - 26th Jan . ; 13th Nov . B .o .S . 263, 325, 452 U .S . 334, 337, 338 Phr . Globe 179 U .S . Gloom 138 U .S . B .o .S . Glorify, to - 14th Aug . 637 U .S . Glorious - 358, 359 U .S . 186 Phr . Glory - 21st March ; 14th Aug . ; B .o .S . 6th Nov . 240, 323 U .S . 246, 319 Phr . B .O .S . Glow - 26th Aug . Go, to - 11th Febr . ; 26th B .o .S . Mav ; 16th Oct . 62, 138 , 173, 177, 206, 224 , 275, 332, 355, 360, 398, 441, 486, 523 , 562, 569 , U .S . 586, 591, 646 , 649
(cont . Go, to ) 218, 247, 264, 286, 291 , 312, 314 Aph . 43, 269 Phr . Goal - 18th Jan . ; 29th April ;
27th May ; 1st, 19th, 30th June B .o .S . 56, 227, 470, 479, 491 , 505, 523, 540, 567, 628 , 642 U .S . 62, 137, 211, 213, 249 , 326, 352 Aph . 200, 202, 318 Phr . God - 5th, 10th, 11th, 13th , 15th, 16th, 20th, 24th Jan . ; 7th, 16th, 24th, 27th Febr . ; 2nd, 6th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 19th, 21st, 22nd, 25th, 26th, 28th, 31st March ; 1st, 5th, 7th, 8th, 12th, 16th, 19th, 27th April ; 10th, 13th, 14th, 17th, 18th, 29th, 30th May ; 7th, 12th, 25th, 29th June ; 10th, 16th, 19th, 26th, 30th July ; 12th, 13th, 14th, 24th, 25th Aug . ; 14th, 16th, 18th, 25th Sept . ; 2nd, 3rd, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th, 14th, 16th, 21st, 22nd, 23rd, 25th, 28th, 29th, 30th, 31st Oct . ; 1st, 3rd, 4th, 6th, 7th, 16th, 24th, 25th, 26th, 29th Nov . ; 4th, 17th, 18th, 22nd . B .o .S . Dec . 9, 43, 68 - 70, 93, 94 , 107, 115, 127, 129, 140, 180 - 189, 196, 203, 207, 210, 240, 242, 244, 257 260, 269, 284, 285, 334, 335, 356, 375, 381, 396, 397, 415, 437, 438, 444, 446, 458, 460, 461, 463, 470, 477, 478, 491, 492, 498, 500, 501, 503, 508, 510, 511, 515 - 517, 520, 535, 540, 557, 564, 565, 569, 572, 581, 583, 585, 589, 591, 603, 607, 609, 621, 622, 626, 631, 634, 637, 638, 641, 642, 647 , 650, 654, 658 U .S . 2, 3, 13, 14, 20, 21, 27 , 31, 36, 37, 40, 41, 46, 52, 60, 67 - 70, 72 - 75, 88, . 101, 114, 116, 118, 122 124, 127, 131, 136, 143, 293
294 (cont . God) 144, 154, 161, 170 - 173, 178, 195, 196, 198 - 200, 212, 216 - 219, 224, 225, 230, 235, 239, 241, 252, 254, 257, 259, 268, 270, 273, 276, 280, 285, 287, 293, 295, 300302, 305, 306, 316, 317, 325, 327, 331, 332, 337 , 340, 349 Aph . 5, 40, 41, 45, 51, 61, 64 , 69, 70, 101, 140, 144 - 149, 151 - 154, 159, 161, 165, 187, 206, 207, 209, 212, 216, 218, 220, 221, 233, 238, 239, 242, 246, 250, 264, 283, 286, 295, 301, 304, 308, 311, 332, 339, 341, 342, 344, 347, 353 , 360, 363, 366, 369 Phr . God-communication - 11th May B .o .S . God-conscious - 446 U .S . God-consciousness - 647 U .S . 254, 311, 314 Aph . Goddess(es) - 438 U .S . God-ideal - 25th June B .o .S . 189, 269, 470, 526 U .S . 295, 316 Aph . Godly 445 U .S . God realization - 460 U .S . God-realized - 349 Aph . Gold 190 U .S . Good(s) - 15th, 16th Jan . ; 14th Febr . ; 31st March ; 16th July ; 6th Sept . ; 10th, 12t h Oct . B .o .S . 5, 20, 22, 93, 106, 137 , 147, 191, 200, 277, 305, 306, 344, 374, 384, 406, 451, 586, 596, 629, 630 , 645, 654 U .S . 174, 193, 194, 214, 276 , 288, 317 Aph . 5, 228, 265 Phr . Goodness - 15th Jan . B .o .S . 54, 71, 399 U .S . 68, 125, 214, 312, 317 Aph . Goodwill - 22nd Dec . B .o .S . Govern, to - 330, 578 U .S . Grace - 295, 575, 621, 622 U .S . 3 Aph . 145 - 147, 190, 191, 264 , 350, 352 Phr . Grade(s) - 21st May B .o .S . 209 U .S . 177 Aoh . Gradually - 6th Oct . B .o .S . 125 U .S . Gramophone - 7th May B .o .S . Grant, to - 181 U .S . 294
(cont . Grant, to ) 47, 111, 112, 116, 118, 178, 179, 205, 229, 232 , 236, 303 Phr . Grape(s) - 63 U .S . Grass blade(s) - 10 U .S . Gratitude - 12th July B .O .S . 517 U .S . 277 Aph . Grave - 26, 257 U .S . Great(ly) - 12th, 17th Febr . ; 18th March ; 14th, 15th April ; 6th May ; 15th, 21st July ; 19th Aug . ; 19th Sept. ; 5th Oct . ; 7th Nov . ;. 10th , 16th, 30th Dec . B .o .S . 17, 21, 55, 91, 100, 101 , 113, 120, 137, 188, 235, 248, 255, 298, 334, 381, 492, 511, 528, 552 - 554 ,
579, 585, 587, 605, 611 U .S . 24, 25, 33, 35, 68, 89 , 114, 117, 118, 124, 147, 169, 206, 265, 280, 293 , 333, 345, 351, 352 Aph . 115 Phr . Greatness - 555, 577 U .S . Greedy 148 U .S . Green 659 U .S . Greet, to - 192, 411 U .S . Grievance(s) - 2nd Sept . B .o .S . Grieve, to - 29th Dec . B .o .S . Grip 102 U .S . Grope, to - 552 U .S . Ground - 21st Febr . ; 2nd . Nov . B .o .S . 87, 528 U .S . 249 Aph . Group(s) - 256, 563 U .S . Group, to - 338 U .S . Grouping(s) - 338 U .S . Grow, to - 8th April B .o .S . 62, 1.20, 181, 444 U .S . 197 Aph . Grown-up - 467 U .S . Growth - 167 Phr . Grudge - 8th Jan . B .O .S . 69 Phr . Guard, to - 28, 160 U .S . 153 Aph . Guest 11 U .S . Guidance - 55, 254, 276, 561 , 562 U .S . 153, 170 Aph . 101, 196, 199, 202, 203 Phr . Guide - 213, 214 U .S . Guide, to - 42, 85, 227 U .S . 151, 170 Aph . 24, 33, 36, 46, 59, 71 , 132, 156, 157, 189, 193 -
29 5 (cont . Guide, to) 195, 197, 198, 200 - 204, 224, 244 , 266 Phr . Guise - 18th Nov . B .o .S .
Habib - 244 Phr . Habit - 106, 426 U .S . 33 9 Aph . Hadi - 204 Phr . Hair - 45 U .S . Half - 167 U .S . 96 Aph . 344 Phr . Halt, to - 51 5 U .S . Hand(s) - 12th, 24th Aug . ; 27th Dec . B .o .S . 85, 128, 148, 192, 208, 224, 245, 328, 356, 386, 449 , 451, 453, 554, 572, 593 , 626 U .S . 242 A ph . 360, 361 P hr . Handle 208 U .S . Hang, to - 327 A ph . Happen, to - 143, 392, 443 , 620 U .S . Happiness - 31st March ; 20th April ; 14th, 28th June ; 19th, 25th July ; 23rd Aug . ; 5th Sept . ; 11th Nov . ; 31st Dec . B .o .S . 72, 147, 181, 193, 194, 452, 492, 519 U .S . 23, 37, 44, 54, 57, 69, 89, 101, 154, 166, 195, 196 , 203, 232, 239, 327, 350 Aph . 30, 84, 90, 123, 144, 221, 222, 224, 227, 229, 230 , 346, 348 P hr . Happy(ily) - 28th June ; 6th Sept . ; 15th Dec . B .o .S . 72, 79, 411, 452 U .S . 85, 97, 166, 203, 213 A ph . 78, 89, 147, 159, 213, 222, 223, 225, 301, 353, 370 P hr . Hard - 1st Febr . ; 27th March ; 7th May ; 27th June ; 30t h Oct . B .o .S . 217, 250, 275, 282, 389 , 429 U .S . 231 A ph . Harden, to - 23rd July B .o .S . 482 U .S . Hardness - 15th Sept . B .o .S . Hardship(s) - 231 A ph . B .o .S . Harm - 4th July 130, 173 U .S . 231 Phr . Harm, to - 175 U .S .
Harmonious(ly) - 13th Oct . B .o .S . 195 U .S . 173 Aph . 44, 75, 80, 86, 88, 89 , 170 P hr . Harmonize, to - 81, 82, 84 , 87 P hr . Harmony - 18th April ; 23rd June ; 13th Oct . ; 13th Dec . B .o .S . 230, 240, 276, 492, 528 , 586 U .S . 27, 34, 222 A ph . 66, 73, 74, 79, 83, 85, 87, 90, 254, 335, 346 P hr . Harp(s) - 451 U .S . 251 A ph . Harsh - 7th May B .o .S . 389, 436 U .S . Harvest - 21st Febr . B .o .S . Hate, to - 231 U .S . 69 Phr . Hatred - 6th March B .o .S . Haunt, to - 263 U .S . Have, to - 1st May ; 23r d July ; 28th Aug . ; 28th Oct . ; 14th Dec . B .o .S . 83, 99, 105, 137, 166, 167, 177, 183, 184, 214, 221, 226, 239, 243, 246, 249, 252, 275, 277, 278, 301, 343, 356, 372, 386, 403, 436, 441, 444, 458, 500, 501, 504, 512, 514, 521, 523, 532, 533, 540, 549, 554, 563, 586, 588, 610, 616, 624, 636, 642, 645 U .S . 180, 194, 205, 207, 219, 225, 234, 242, 247, 251, 262, 276, 278, 297, 337, 348, 350, 351 A ph . 37, 49, 52, 69, 70, 101, 173, 175, 182, 205, 211, 236, 284, 338 P hr . Head - 45, 148, 157, 164 , 191, 395, 439, 621, 648 U .S . Heal, to - 15th Oct . B .o .S . 503, 651 U .S . 133, 209 A ph . 31, 61, 104, 125, 145, 146, 160, 192, 223, 242, 291, 302, 304, 311, 312, 332 334, 337 - 343, 345, 349, 351, 352, 354 - 356 P hr . Healer 503 U .S . 352, 356 P hr . Healing - 15th Oct . B .o .S . 655 U .S . Health - 150, 465 U .S . 5, 30, 90, 123, 303, 335, 336, 346, 348, 350 P hr . 295
29 6 Healthy - 107 U .S . 67, 353 Phr . Hear, to - 5th April ; 8th May B .o .S . 43, 158, 301 Aph . 153, 154 Phr . Heart(s) - 21st, 26th, 27th , 28th, 30th, 31st Jan . ; 1st, 4th, 6th Febr . ; 6th, 28th March ; 2nd, 5th, 6th April ; 17th, 29th May ; 1st, 5th, 7th, 15th, 17th, 21st, 27th, 28th June ; 10th, 16th, 20th, 23rd, 31st July ; 10th, 15th, 22nd Aug . ; 5th, 13th, 25th Sept . ; 16th, 18th, 29th, 31st Oct . ; 4th, 26th Nov . ; 14th, 21st Dec . B .o .S . 39, 56, 62, 73 - 75, 77, 81 , 87, 114, 134, 137, 149, 159, 161, 167, 179, 196, 205, 217, 227, 230, 233, 255, 260, 285, 293, 296, 299, 304, 316, 325, 338a, 342, 356, 368, 381, 404, 415, 436, 439, 450, 478, 486, 492, 500, 507, 520, 558, 569, 585, 586, 594, 615 , 640, 651 U .S . 7, 23, 27, 29, 35, 42, 47 , 56, 64, 71, 74, 84, 97, 114, 135, 142, 185, 187, 192, 197, 201, 230, 243, 280 , 292, 302, 319, 332, 338 Aph . 1, 5, 31, 35, 41, 45, 67 , 68, 74, 78, 86, 89, 92, 99, 101, 129, 137, 138, 150 153, 180, 181, 183, 205, 248, 251, 266, 282, 284, 293 - 295, 297 - 299, 301, 303, 305 - 316, 332, 342 , 343, 345, 351, 355, 356 Phr . Hearty 637 U .S . Heat - 29th June B .o .S . Heathen - 9, 68, 119, 184 , 189, 244, 257, 269, 482 U .S . Heaven(s) - 3rd, 6th, 9th March ; 11th Aug . ; 25th .Sept . ; 26th Oct . ; 5th Nov . B .o .S . 55, 107, 115, 154, 155, 197 , 198, 222, 255, 302, 329, 381, 385, 398, 452, 453 , 500, 566 U .S . 49, 68, 84 - 87, 89, 151 , 153, 154, 197, 251, 258 , 260, 279, 288 Aoh . 250, 281, 363 Phr . Heavenly -128, 381, 569 U .S . 51, 151, 321 Aph . Heavenwards - 313 U .S . Heavy - 55, 132, 265, 539 U .S . 296
Height(s) - 18th May B .O .S . 217, 454 U .S . 65 Aph . Hell - 9th March ; 26th Oct . B .o .S . 197, 385, 452, 566 U .S . Help - 12th June B .o .S . 383 U .S . Help, to - 8th April ; 19th , 20th May B .o .S . 109, 127, 149, 477, 500 ,
608, 647 U .S . 17, 28, 198 Aph . 94, 128, 158, 171, 201 , 215, 249, 269, 271, 273 , 276, 277 Phr . Helper 453 U .S . Helpless - 4th Dec . B .o .S . 36 U .S . 24, 82 . Aph . Helplessness - 165, 311 Aph . Hence - 24th May B .o .S . Herb - 2nd Aug . B .O .S . Herd(s) - 105 Aph . Here - 338a, 360 U .S . 95, 135, 214, 312 Aph . Hereafter - 39, 135, 240 , 296, 343 Aph . Heritage - 83, 121 Aph . Hide, to - 2nd Jan . ; 6th March ; 20th April ; 14th May ; 4th, 27th June ; 24th Aug . ; 11th Oct . ; 18th Nov . B .o .S . 4, 90, 300, 477, 502, 537 , 589 U .S . 16, 17, 82, 83, 141, 155 , 327, 329 Aph . Hierarchy - 502 U .S . High - 21st May ; 1st June ; 7th Oct . ; 1st, 27th Dec . B .o .S . 56, 84, 107, 312, 324, 381 , 451, 500, 553, 593 U .S . 4, 19, 21, 65, 95, 154 , 217, 231, 288, 301, 318 , 321 Aph . Hinder, to - 120, 601 U .S . Hindrance - 22, 99 Aph . Hindu 438 U .S . Hit, to - 389, 441 U .S . Hitherto - 155 Aph . Hoard, to - 39 U .S . Hold - 208, 351 U .S . Hold, to - 16th May ; 11th , 29th June ; 3rd Oct . B .o_ .S . 110, 201, 222, 328, 351 , 490, 554, 649 U .S . 151, 211, 319, 335, 336 Aph . Hole(s) - 17, 35a, 167, 282 U .S . Holy - 27th Febr . B .o .S . 109 Aph . Home - 143, 397, 624 U .S .
297 (cont . Home ) (cont . Humility) Nov . B .o .S . 157 Aph . 192, 491, 577 U .S . 12, 84, 86, 89, 179, 180, 4 Aph . 254, 335, 346 Phr . Humour - 227 Aph . Home-sickness 158 Aph . Hundred - 166 U .S . Honey 63 U .S . Hunger - 22nd Febr . ; 26th Honour - 105, 200, 420, 433 U .S . Sept . B .o .S . Honour, to - 40, 420 U .S . 264 Aph . Honourable - 36 U .S . Hungry - 12, 198 U .S . Hope - 59, 127, 207 U .S . Hurt, to - 16th July B .o .S . 383 Aph . 33, 388, 415, 436, .651 U .S . 165, 211, 270 Phr . Husband - 200 U .S . Hope, to - 283 Aph . 352 Phr . Hopeful - 22nd Dec . B .o .S . Hypocrisy - 126 U .S . 219 Phr . Horizon - 18, 280, 330, 331 Aph . Horn(s) - 161 U .S . I - 7th March ; 3rd Nov . B .o .S . Horrible - 13 U .S . 114, 122, 135, 143, 165 , Horse - 8th March B .o .S . 167, 178, 190, 196, 203, 441 U .S . 231, 232, 241, 242, 262, Host(s) - 84 Aph . 264, 285, 287, 295, 312, Hostility - 267 U .S . 313, 352, 356, 371, 372, Hot - 108, 629 U .S . 376 - 378, 431, 441, 459, Hotel 520 U .S . 478, 518, 523, 551, 570 , Hour 55 Aph . 588, 642, 645 U .S . 62, 214 Phr . 338 Aph . House - 11, 158, 624 U .S . Ice - 23rd July B .o .S . How - 11th, 22nd April ; 30th Idea(s) - 24th April ; 1s t May ; 13th Oct . ; 15th Dec . B .o .S . May ; .-27th Sept . B .o .S . 18, 62, 155, 160, 192, 206, 159, 202, 367, 504 U .S . 250, 368, 401, 431, 540, 150 Aph . 578, 605, 623 U .S . Ideal(s) - 10th Jan . ; 28th 54, 174, 210 Aph . Febr . ; 12th April ; 18th, However - 28th April ; 19th 22nd May ; 25th June ; 28th Sept . ; 7th Nov . ; 22nd Dec . B .o .S . Sept . B .o .S . 120, 255, 500 U .S . 76, 94, 120, 182, 189, 203 , 193, 219, 277, 318, 350 Aph . 204, 206, 255, 387, 405, Howle, to - 199 U .S . 453, 474, 480, 491, 636 U .S . Human - 3rd, 20th Jan . ; 29th 4, 42, 68, 106, 172, 288 , June ; 3rd, 5th July ; 7th 310, 319, 348 Aph . Nov . B .O .S . Idealism - 480 U .S . 88, 89, 189, 213, 214, 229, Idealist - 88 U .S . 256, 282, 304, 338a, 381, Idealistic - 120 U .S . 454, 457, 475, 502, 530, Identify, to - 55 U .S . 608, 621, 651 U .S . Idol - 245, 487 U .S . 61, 65, 70, 89, 91, 110, 310 Aph . 121, 122, 135, 204, 295, Idolatry - 126 U .S . 332, 340 Aph . Ignorance - 80, 82, 83, 226 , Humanity - 15th April ; 3rd, 230, 342 Aph . 5th July B .o .S . Ignorant - 2nd May ; 16th 139, 502, 518, 528, 562, Dec . B .o .S . 565, 571, 599, 645 U .S . 273, 490, 660 U .S . 204, 274 Aph . 249 Aph . 247 Phr . Ill - 486, 624 U .S . Humble, to - 19th, 30th Illmannered - 390 U .S . March B .o .S . Illness - 29th Jan . B .O .S . Humbly 381 U .S . 624 U .S . 219 Aph . 209 Aph . Humiliation - 156 U .S'. 347 Phr . Humility - 13th March ; 8th Illuminate, to - 18th, 26th 297
298 (cont . Illuminate, to) June ; 26th Aug . B .o .S . 38, 276, 325, 327, 502, 569 U .S .
78, 81, 319, 329 Aph . 6, 20, 21, 31, 45, 59, 68 , 76, 86, 89, 102, 138, 145, 146, 154, 197, 205, 240, 261, 282, 285, 291, 292, 295, 297, 298, 301, 302 , 304, 310 - 312 Phr . Illumination - 10th May ; 7th July B .o .S . -492 U .S . 238 Aph . 179, 180, 299, 303 Phr . Illumine, to - 26th June ; 26th Aug . B .o .S . Illusion(s) - 338, 365 U .S . 1, 68, 154, 244, 245, 336 Aph . Image - 14th April B .o .S .
Imagination(s) - 14th April ; 6th Dec . 120, 290, 356, 550, 579 5, 25 4 296 Imagine, to - 187, 392 235, 27 4 Imitate, to - 1 Immanence - 129 46 Immediate - 221, 382 Immensity - 6 Immerse, to - 625 Immodest - 473 Immoral - 390 Immortal - 53 Immortality - 625 20 5 Imperfect - 128 Imperfection - 15th July 25 4 61 Imperishable - 407 Impious - 20th Febr . Importance - 598 128, 24 6 Important - 9th March ; 22nd April ; 26th Oct . 586 128, 203, 299 Impossible - 19th May Impress, to - 20th Dec . 210, 22 1 Impression(s) - 21st March ; 6th Nov . ; 20th Dec . Imprisonment - 402 Improve, to - 1
Impulse - 64, 77, 207, 334, 54 7
234 298
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . Anh . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . B .o .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph .
(cont . Impulse) 35 8 Impurity(ies) - 132 Inactivity - 234 Incarnate, to - 125 Incense - 591 Inclination - 14th Jan . Incline, to - 267, 317, 524 95 Include, to - 163 Incomparable (y) - .38, 176 Incomplete - 11th Febr . Inconsiderate - 401 Increase, to - 21st Jan . 48 5 334 Indeed - 105, 317 197, 27 6 Independence - 522 Independent - 279, 448, 450, 45 9 Indifference - 11th Febr . 85, 521, 522 Indifferent - 381, 450 Indignance - 108 Indiscreet - 221 Indiscretion - 459 Individual(ly) - 18th April ; 21st May ; 5th, 23rd June ; 7th July ; 13th Oct . 89, 92, 160, 502 16, 131, 344 Individualize, to - 485 Industry - 22 4 Indwell, to - 585 Inferior - 7th June Infinite - 50, 178, 222 Infirmity(ies) - 208, 354, 38 8 Influence(s) - 13th Sept . ; 29th Dec . 64, 233, 338, 51 4 21, 87, 121, 237, 253, 259 Inhale, to - 5 1 Inharmonious - 13th Sept . 19 5 Inharmony(ies) - 18th April ; 30th May ; 13th Sept . ; 13th Oct . 27, 79, 20 9 Inherit, to - 12th June 30 2 41, 59, 269 Initiate(s) - 502 27 1 Initiate, to - 125 11 8 Initiation(s) - 497, 530 118, 23 1 Initiator - 502
Phr . Aph . Aph . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Aph . Aph . S .O .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S .
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . Aph . U .S . S .O .S . U .S . Phr . Aph . S .O .S . U.S.
B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . U .S .
29 9 Injure, to - 23rd June
B .o .S .
Injury - 585 Injustice - 622 Innate - 25th, 30th June
U .S . U .S . B .O .S .
Inner - 19th July ; 6th Aug .
B .o .S .
21st July
B .o .S .
U .S .
441
U .S .
253, 350, 374, 527, 643 10, 30, 36, 43, 44, 102,
(cont . Interest )
253 Aph . Interest, to - 376, 381, 616 U .S . Interesting - 25th April ; Interfere, to - 608
U .S .
Aph .
Interpret, to - 202
U .S .
Phr . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . Anh . U .S . U .S . Aph .
287 Interpreter - 475, 502 Interval - 290 Intimacy - 177 Intimate - 114, 206 Intolerance - 306 Intoxicate, to - 24, 230 Intoxication - 16th Dec .
Anh . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S .
Insight - 20th, 25th may
B .o .S .
Intuition - 18th Oct .
B .o .S .
Insincerity - 464 Inspiration - 4th Sent .
U .S . B .o .S .
173, 187, 302, 328 202 Innermost - 14th Oct . Innocence - 27th Febr . 117 156 Innocent - 40, 528
Insect(s) - 604 91
107, 540, 653 36, 187, 216, 320 150, 248 Inspire, to - 4th Oct . 285, 288, 327
U .S . Aph .
U .S . Aph . Phr .
Intuitive - 278 22 Invaluable - 29th Febr .
U .S . Aph . B .o .S .
B .o .S . U .S .
261, 456 Invasion - 10
U .S . U .S .
Involve, to - 322 Inward(ly) - 30th June
U .S . B .o .S .
53, 320, 346 Aph . 15, 16, 26, 31, 36, 45, 59, 60, 97, 103, 125, 131, 135,
136, 154, 200, 224, 260, 261, 266, 272, 310, 314
278, 464, 465, 653 22, 23, 266
446
U .S .
Phr .
Irregularity - 150 Irreligious - 20th Febr .
U .S . B .o .S .
Inspirer - 611
U .S .
Islam - 73, 659
U .S .
Instance(s) - 205
U .S . Jar, to - 514 21 Jealously - 28 Jealousy - 304 110
U .S . Phr . U .S . U .S . Aph .
Instant - 254 U .S . Instantly - 486 U .S . B .o .S . Instead - 29th Oct . 144, 160, 350, 424, 649 U .S . Instrument(s) - 7th May ; 24th B .o .S . Nov . ; 17th Dec .
451, 579 123, 133, 172, 203, 265 95, 109, 115, 117 Intact - 206 56 Intellect - 12th Febr . ; 10th July 562 Intellectual - 125 263 Intelligence - 13th, 27th Febr . ; 20th Nov . 117, 562, 565 47, 72, 159, 210 262 Intelligent - 183 Intelligible - 25th June 172 Intend, to - 12th Aug . Intensely - 629 Interdependent - 160 Interest - 11th Febr . 160, 166, 210, 417
U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . Aph .
B .O .S . Aoh . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S .
359
Phr .
Jest Jesus - 211, 640 U .S . Aph . 205 Jewel(s) - 19th, 28th Jan . ; 16th Aug . B .O .S . 154, 159 U .S . Jewelled - 19th Jan . B .o .S . Jewish - 139 U .S . Join, to - 649 U .S . Aph . 179 Journey - 500 U .S . 68, 134, 278 Aph . Aoh . Journey, to - 134, 243, 253 Joy - 31st March ; 12th, 19th July ; 1st Sept . ; 20th Oct . ; B .o .S . 3rd, 28th Dec . 11, 62, 147, 149, 193, 228 , 279, 285, 305, 442, 548 , 568, 569, 587, 612 U .S . 28, 54, 74, 109, 253, 264 , Aph . 281, 294 Phr . 30, 232 - 234, 343, 355 299
30 0 Joyful - 381 U .S . Joyous - 213 Phr . Judaism - 659 U .S . Judge - 247 U .S . 72, 235 Aph . Judge, to - 8th July ; 2nd Dec . B .o .S . 70, 140, 144, 210, 247 U .S . 72, 140, 143 Aph . Judgement Day - 32, 55 Aph . Juice - 230 U .S . Just - 11th, 31st March ; 16th June ; 25th July B .o .S . 17, 187, 310, 372, 434, 451 , 532, 624 U .S . 312, 320 Aoh . Justice - 14th May ; 13t h June ; 1st, 3rd Nov . ; 2n d Dec . B .o .S . 191, 210, 412, 417, 605 U .S .
Justification - 338
Aph .
Kafi - 334, 355, 356 Phr . Karma - 443, 620 U .S . Keen 295 U .S . 55, 202, 328 Aph . 290, 328 Aph . Keep, to - 21st Jan . ; 24t h April ; 4th May ; 1st, 4th, 5th, 8th, 12th June ; 13th, 15th Sept . ; 20th Oct . ; 14th , 20th Dec . B .o .S 7, 8, 58, 84, 170, 191, 206 , 227, 250, 370, 381, 434, 464, 500, 514, 541, 586 , 625 U .S . 56, 83, 191, 244, 352 Aph . 83, 231, 259, 315 Phr . Kernel 617 U .S . Key 460 U .S . 194, 242 Aph . Keynote - 21st Sept . B .o .S 315 Aph . Kill, to - 584, 633 U .S . Kind (aj ., ad .) - 26th Jan . B .o . S 44, 61, 200, 654 U .S . Kind(s) (sb .) - 13th, 23r d Sept . B .o .S Kindle, to - 7th June ; 21s t Aug . ; 20th Sept . ; 3rd Oct . ; 27th Nov . B .o .S 523, 552, 642 U .S . 207 Aph . 41, 67, 78, 138, 287, 295 , 297, 298, 310 - 312 Phr . Kindness - 1st May ; 7th June B .o .S 13, 61, 492b, 654 U .S . 349 Aph . King - 19th Jan . ; 28th Febr . B .o .S 300
(cont . King ) 232, 453 U .S . 235 Aph . Kingdom - 12th June ; 25th Sept . B .o .S . 232, 437 , 591, 626, 638 U .S . 59, 195 , 269, 276, 280 Aph . 155 Phr . 75 Aph . Kingship Kiss 306 U .S . Kiss, to - 67, 409 U .S . Knee ( s) 593 U .S . Knife 64 Aph . Knock, to - 395 U .S . Knot 8 U .S . Know, to - 362 Phr . Knowable 19 Aph . Knower ( s) - 145, 214, 384 U .S . 11, 103 Aph . Knowledge - 11th Jan . ; 13th Febr . ; 3rd, 23rd, 25th , 28th March ; 20th, 23rd April ; 3rd July ; 19th, 20th, 29th Sept . ; 11th, 28th , 31st Oct . ; 23rd, 26th Nov . B .o .S . 107, 214, 340, 372, 504 , 510 U .S . 20, 36, 48, 119 , 126, 154 , 187, 236, 241 Aph . Krishna 6 Aoh .
Labour - 234, 435 U .S . Lack - 2nd Febr . ; 24th Dec . B .o .S . 27, 108 U .S . 156, 232 Aph . Lack, to - 3rd May ; 29th June ; 2nd July B .o .S . 276, 324 Aph . Lake 31 U .S . Lamp - 26th June ; 20th Sept . B .o .S . Land - 374, 381 U .S . Language - 462 U .S . Lantern - 85, 554 U .S . Large - 14th April ; 23r d July B .o .S . 17, 55, 201, 378, 446, 503 U :S . 292 Aph . Last - 7th March ; 3rd, 7t h Nov . B .O .S . 6, 205 U .S . 25 Aph . Last, to - 181 U .S . Late - 338a, 461, 567 U .S . Laugh, to - 35 U .S . Law(s) - 15th Febr . ; 3rd July B .O .S . 210, 215, 417, 475, 502 , 532, 598, 610, 611 U .S . 52, 53, 71, 73, 173, 180,
30 1 (cont . Law(s)) 327, 329 , 339, 346 Aph . Lay, to - 154, 453, 460 U .S . Laya 275 U .S . Lead, to - 18th Jan . ; 4th Febr . ; 10th, 17th, 19th, 25th, 28th June ; 7th July ;
5th August B .o .S . 48, 108, 344, 365, 470, 505 , 567, 573, 625 U .S . 21, 40, 62, 213 Aph . 157, 200, 202, 224, 268 Phr . Leaf(ves) - 17th Nov . B .o .S . 354 U .S . Learn, to - 16th Jan . ; 13th , 27th March ; 22nd April ; 1st, 3rd May ; 22nd July ; 7th Aug . ; 11th Sept . ; 6th, 7th, 18th, 27th, 30th Oct . ;• 7th , B .O .S . 23rd Nov . ; 7th Dec . 144, 195, 427, 525, 527 , 528, 536, 557, 599 U .S . 3, 54, 58, 140, 164, 226 , 228, 247, 248 Aph . Learned - 277 Aph . Learning - 25th March ; 22n d
April ; 25th May ; 28th Oct . ; 26th Nov . B .o .S . 34, 504 U .S . Leave, to - 22nd May ; 23r d June ; 29th Oct . B .O .S . 94, 118, 126, 138, 165, 228 ,
299, 360, 398, 513, 551 , 566, 628 U .S . 201, 218, 249 Aph . Left 621 U .S . Leg(s) - 148, 356 U .S . Length - 216, 217 U .S . Lesson - 16th Jan . ; 7th, 13th
March ; 22nd April ; 7th Aug . ; 3rd, 8th Nov . B .O .S . 449, 527, 557 U .S . Let, to - 252, 542, 629, 645 U .S . 53, 221, 346 Aph . 1, 91, 92, 95, 155, 167 , 243, 244, 262, 300, 320 , 321, 338, 349 Phr . Level 4 Aph . Liberate, to - 74 U .S . 161 Aph . 315 Phr . Liberation - 348 Aph . Liberty - 274 U .S . Lie, to - 20th June ; 3rd, 19th July ; 10th Nov . ; 28th, 31s t Dec . B .o .S . 156, 15 7 Life(ves) - 2nd, 14th, 26th, 31st Jan . ; 11th, 17th, 22nd, 28th, 29th Febr . ; 13th, 27th
(cont . Life(ves)) March ; 3rd, 12th, 16th April ; 7th, 20th, 21st, 22nd May ; 8th, 9th, 11th, 18th, 23rd, 24th, 25th, 26th, 27th, 30th June ; 5th, 9th, 12th, 20th, 21st, 27th July ; 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 15th, 29th Aug . ; 2nd, 17th, 28th, 29th Sept . ; 3rd, 5th, 6th, 9th, 16th, 19th, 30th Oct . ; 2nd, 3rd, 7th, 12th, 23rd Nov . ; 3rd, 6th, 7th, 11th, 15th, 16th, 17th , 20th, 22nd, 26th Dec . B .o .S . 18, 27, 41, 53, 55, 61, 63 , 72, 77, 79, 80, 83, 91, 95, 99, 107, 111, 118 - 120, 124a, 137, 145, 160, 174, 178, 181, 193, 200, 204, 205, 218 - 227, 229, 230, 240, 246, 261, 262, 279, 285, 286, 293, 307, 319, 321, 326, 342, 352, 354, 356, 374, 376, 379, 381, 385, 417, 419, 425, 428, 429, 438, 444, 448, 449, 452, 454, 461, 483, 488, 490, 491, 493, 505, 506, 514, 527, 541, 578, 586, 587, 592, 594, 614, 621, 625, 626, 646, 647, 650 , 658, 660 U .S . 6, 7, 19, 20, 24, 26, 29 , 30, 38 - 40, 46, 54, 55, 58, 60, 61, 64, 73, 78, 82, 84, 89, 90, 92, 102, 109, 114, 126, 139, 141, 144 149, 154, 155, 159, 162, 167, 188, 189, 191, 192, 194, 201 - 203, 207, 220, 222, 226, 231, 234, 241, 242, 245, 253, 258, 263, 269, 270, 277, 282, 283, 285, 287, 294, 297, 299, 308, 316, 319, 321, 327, 329, 330, 333, 335, 350 , 351 Aph . 2, 4 - 8, 10, 12, 14, 16 , 18 - 22, 24, 27, 29, 30, 33, 35, 36, 39, 41, 42 , 44 -46, 51, 53, 55, 56, 61, 63, 67, 68, 72, 73, 76 80, 82, 89, 90, 93, 98, 106, 116, 119, 121, 126, 133, 143, 147 - 150, 155, 159 - 172, 175, 190, 191, 193, 194, 201, 203, 204, 210, 214, 217, 221 - 223, 225, 226, 228, 229, 233, 30 1
30 2 (cont . Life(ves)) 234, 236, 243, 245, 250 - 252, 255, 257, 266, 269, 272, 273, 275 - 279, 281 - 284, 290, 293, 294, 305, 313, 316 , 318, 325, 344, 362 - 370 Phr . Lifeless - 23rd April B .o .S . Lifetime - 244 Aph . Lift, to - 132, 285, 539 U .S . 161, 240, 249 Aph . 67 Phr . Light (sb .) - 26th Jan . ; 3rd , '6th, 31st March ; 2nd, 8th April ; 9th May ; 21st, 26th, 29th June ; 18th July ; 27th Aug . ; 20th Sept . ; 20th Nov . ; 3rd Dec . B .O .S . 4, 74, 84, 179, 181, 190 , 214, 227, 230, 287, 310, 338, 342, 408, 461, 462, 523, 558, 569, 619, 641 , 642, 658 U .S . 20, 36, 66, 79, 114, 139 , 142, 153, 154, 159, 177, 197, 201, 207, 215, 218, 227, 229, 266, 272, 303 ,
307, 322, 323, 332, 342 Aoh . 19, 21, 30, 68, 71, 77, 82, 144, 159 - 163, 196, 205 , 229, 240, 281, 282, 284 286, 326 Phr . Light (aj ., ad .) - 1st Aug . B .o .S . 132, 313, 514 U .S . 74 Aph . Light, to - 4th Oct . B .o .S . Lighten, to - 21st Aug . B .o .S . 285 U .S . 78 Aph . Lighthouse - 227 U .S . Like - 5th, 15th Febr . ; 6th March ; 7th, 31st May ; 18th , 27th June ; 15th Sept . ; 4th Oct . ; 5th, 16th Nov . ; 6th , 14th Dec . B .o .S . 20, 30, 36, 39, 73, 87, 152 , 201, 238, 310, 319, 328, 342, 350, 449, 450, 473, 559, 592, 617, 618, 624 , 627, 629, 634, 651 U .S . 152, 187, 255, 298 Aph . Like, to - 8th Febr . B .o .S . 231, 348, 584, 624 U .S . Likeness - 338a U .S . Limit, to - 13th, 15th Jan . ; 30th March ; 12th April ; 13th, 14th May ; 1st, 23rd July ; 3rd, 18th Sept . ; 28th Nov . B .o .S . 151, 187, 206, 338 U .S . 124, 127, 129, 172, 289 , 337 Aph . 302
(cont . Limit, to ) 262 Phr . Limitation(s) - 23rd July ; 3rd, 18th Sept . B .o .S . 55, 70, 120, 232, 454 U .S . 6, 24, 61, 78, 82, 88, 90 , 161, 232, 321 Aph . 258 Phr . Limitless - 30th March B .O .S . 172, 327 Aph . Line(s) - 17th Jan . B .o .S . 400, 461, 600, 649 U .S . 163 Aph . Link - 56, 240 Aph . Link, to - 326, 468, 619 U .S . 35 Aph . Lion - 201, 328 U .S . Lips - 21st March B .o .S . 81, 161, 233, 359, 526 , 583 U .S . 103, 115 Aph . Listen, to - 278, 332, 416 U .S . 151, 152 Phr . Literary - 480 U .S . Little, less - 23rd Oct . ;
7th Nov . B .o .S . 313, 338a, 349, 384, 416 , 431, 477, 504, 514, 549, 555, 605, 613, 621, 622 , 624 U .S . 149, 226, 246, 258, 330 Aph . Live, to - 5th, 30th Jan . ; 28th Febr . ; 15th March ; 2nd, 22nd April. ; 25th June ; 22nd Aug . ; 13th Sept . ; 7th Dec . B .o .S . 18, 54, 118, 120, 181, 226 , 253, 262, 381, 454 ; 495, 501, 507, 514, 523, 621 , 634, 642 U .S . 39, 98, 154, 173, 175, 224, 234, 241, 258, 264, 292 , 296, 321 Aph . 144, 160, 164, 212, 225 Phr . Living - 234, 452, 457, 507 U .S . 38, 71, 192, 199, 239, 307, 323 Aph . Load 313 U .S . Location - 148 U .S . Long - 9th Jan . ; 2nd April ; 26th May ; 27th Nov . B .O .S . 21, 61, 181, 227, 237, 540 , 607 U .S . 38, 56, 254 Aph . Long, to - 114, 345 U .S . 328 Aph . 63 Phr . Longing - 26th May ; lst June B .o .S . 56 U .S . 20, 163, 328 Aph . Look, to - 10th April ; 12th,
303 (cont . Look, to) 15th May ; (cont . Love) 228, 232, 233 , 8th July ; 21st Nov . ; 19th 235, 240, 243, 284, 285, Dec . B .o .S . 287, 307, 339, 346, 349 , 167, 313, 320, 396, 409, 350 Aph . 417, 425, 452, 453, 616 - 41, 51, 70 - 79, 262 Phr . 618, 623, 626 U .S . Love, to - 28th June ; 28th , 6, 77 Aph . 29th July ; 17th Aug . ; 7th , Loose 352 U .S . 16th Oct . ; 5th Dec . S .o .S . Lord - 450, 453, 483, 561, 9, 62, 115, 202, 225, 231 , 637 U .S . 239, 262, 264, 399 U .S . 274 Aph . 139, 275 Aph . 2, 6, 14 - 16, 18, 23, 24, 69 Phr . 32, 33, 36, 53 - 56, 74, 76, Loveless - 303 U .S . 79, 81, 96, 97, 99, 100, Loveliness - 128 U .S . 102, 103, 107, 110, 114, Lover - 17th May ; 10th July ; B .o .S . 119, 121, 122, 124, 125, 13th Aug . 127, 128, 130, 132, 134, 18, 239, 241, 301, 381 , 136 138, 143, 157, 160, 632 U .S . 164, 171, 184, 186, 197, 11, 27, 224 Aph . 198, 200, 201, 203, 205, Loving - 175, 191, 208, 303 , 215, 217, 222, 225, 227 469 U .S . 229, 232, 241, 245, 247, Low - 1st June ; 10th Sept . B .O .S . 250 - 253, 259, 271 - 27,4, 56, 451, 593 U .S . 276, 280, 292 - 294, 313, 70, 92, 122, 301 Aph . 320, 330, 337, 338, 340, Luck - 624 U .S . 354, 363, 366 Phr . Lukewarm - 24th July B .o .S . Lore 381 U .S . Lull, to - 20th July B .O .S . 15th Lullaby 350 U .S . Lose, to - 29th Febr . ; March ; 31st Aug . ; 27th, 28th Lustre - 137 U .S . Sept . ; 25th Oct . ; 11th Dec . B .o .S . Lute 381 U .S . 193, 261, 295, 309, 334 ,
351, 352, 428, 492, 492a , 528, 609, 627 - U .S . Machine(s) - 338a U .S . 86, 100, 148, 236, 298, 337 Aph . 334 Aph . Machinery - 338a U .S . Magic 263 U .S . Loss - 23rd Febr . ; 29th Dec . B .O .S . 191, 235, 334, 433 U .S . Magnet 351 U .S . Loud - 1st March B .O .S . Magnetise, to - 26th Jan . B .o .S . B .o .S . 75 U .S . Magnetism - 26th Jan . Main 278 Aph . Lovable 62 U .S . Love - 7th, 11th, 21st, 27th, Maintain, to - 477, 625 U .S . 31st Jan ; 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 27 Aph . 8th, 9th, 26th Febr . ; 6th, Maitreya - 561 U .S . 7th March ; 15th, 16th, 23rd Make, to - 16th Jan . ; 2nd , April ; 1st, 17th, 29th May ; 29th Febr . ; 17th, 27th 15h, 18th, 20th, 22nd, 29th April ; 15th, 21st, 28th June ; 10th, 11th, 30th June ; 15th July ; 26th Aug . ; 9th, 13th, 16th, 17th, July ; 1st Aug . ; 10th Sept . ; 18th, 23rd, 30th Sept . ; 7th, 9th, 29th Oct . ; 7th, 16th B .O .S . 8th, 15th Oct . ; 2nd, 3rd, Nov . ; 16th Dec . 27th Nov . ; 13th, 25th, 26th 8, 9, 16, 24, 36, 41, 43 , Dec . B .o .S . 51, 65, 69, 76, 77, 88, 104, 42, 62, 64, 82, 127, 155, 120, 153, 156, 157,' 160, 170, 176, 177, 181, 236 - 171, 174, 182, 225, 226, 240, 269, 276, 281, 315, 230, 234, 241, 245, 261, 330, 356, 388, 439, 440, 265, 278, 285, 299, 303, 444, 478, 492, 492b, 500, 308, 312, 320, 334, 345, 509, 517, 521, 572, 611 U .S . 353, 379, 395, 399, 417, 13, 40, 52, 53, 68, 72 - 424, 441, 444, 448, 452, 74, 93, 105, 110, 184, 192, 457, 458, 500, 515, 540,
303
304 (cont . Make, to) 562, 605 , 606, 614, 644, 652, 658 39, 4 9, 64, 74, 94, 113 , 146, 154, 172, 187, 188 ,
190,
192, 193, 213, 215 ,
234,
239, 254,
U .S .
269, 274 ,
275, 277, 282, 284, 289 , 294, 296, 314, 324, 339 Aph . 16, 4 4, 56, 61, 67, 78, 86 , 89, 9 3, 108, 10 9, 114, 115 , 121, 123, 130, 139, 169 171, 189, 191, 205, 222 , '223, 225 - 227, 230, 234 , 241, 251, 252, 261, 266 , 275, 279, 289, 293 - 295 , 305, 309, 318, 328, 359 , 366, 367, 370 Phr . Making - 325 Aph . Malakut - 500 U .S . Man, me n - 14th, 15th, 21st , 29th Jan . ; 7th, 9th, 14th , 26th Febr . ; 5th, 7th, 10th , 11th, 12th, 13th, 15th , 16th, 25th, 26th, 29th March ; 3rd, 8th, 10th, 14th , 28th April ; 3rd, 7th, 20th , 23rd, 26th, 27th, 30th May ; 1st, 8th, 11th, 25th, 26th , 30th June ; 1st, 2nd, 4th , 7th, 8th, 9th, 16th, 25th July ; 8th, 12th Aug . ; 5th , 11th, 27th Sept . ; 7th , 11th, 14th, 18th, 22nd , 23rd, 24th, 27th, 28th, 29th Oct . ; 1st, 3rd, 4th Nov . ; 4th, 16th, 17th, 20th, 21st , 22nd, 23rd Dec . B .o . S 15, 2 1, 26, 43, 55, 56, 64 , 68, 7 7, 83 - 87, 90, 91 , 106, 126, 137, 140, 141 , 148, 161, 173, 182, 191 , 192, 203, 205, 217, 218 , 236, 242 - 256, 290, 338a , 345, 353, 354, 381, 385 , 387, 394, 398 - 401, 403 , 408, 415, 417, 427, 429 , 430, 436, 441, 446, 454 , 456, 463, 465 - 467, 480 , 490, 491, 493, 500, 501 , 507, 514, 530, 541, 561 , 562, 566, 585, 586, 594 , 604, 607, 621, 622, 624 , 639, 643, 647, 666 U .S . 2, 5, 24, 27, 31, 39, 49 , 51, 82, 85, 90, 93, 108 , 109, 121, 124, 126, 131 , 141, 163, 164, 169, 177 , 179, 180, 185, 189, 196 , 197, 208, 212 - 214, 229 -
304
(cont . Man, men) 231, 242 244, 248, 253, 258, 259, 268, 270, 274, 276, 292, 293, 296, 302, 312 - 314 , 318, 336, 352 Aph . Manifest - 295, 502 U .S . Manifest, to - 8th Febr . B .o .S . 90, 106, 233, 635, 658 U .S . 51, 71, 75, 178, 197, 236 , 281, 327 Aph . 91 Phr . Manifestation - 257, 532 , 609 U .S . 13, 89, 127, 141, 202, 236, 257, 285, 321 Aph . Mankind - 18th May ; 27th July B .o .S . 211 U .S . Man-made - 103 U .S . Manner(s) - 30th March ; 13t h Sept . B .o .S . 20, 406, 491 U .S . 199 Aph . Many - 1st Jan . ; 27th July ; 30th Oct . ; 7th Nov . ; 23r d Dec . B .o .S . 89, 205, 206, 231, 301 , 323, 365, 377, 449, 604 , 637 U .S . 150, 155, 174, 197, 304 , 314 Aph . Margin - 1st Dec . B .o .S . Marriage - 206 U .S . 255 257 Phr . Marry, to - 400 U .S . Master(s) - 16th Dec . B .o .S . 76, 91, 276, 381, 483, 511, 513, 563 U .S . 59, 114, 204, 216, 217, 269, 300, 320 Aph . Master, to - 584 U .S . Master-man - 77 U .S . Mastery - 19th Febr . ; 3rd May, 21st Sept . ; 10th Nov . B .o .S . 443, 620 U .S . 191 Aph . Mate 204 U .S . Material - 30th April ; 27th June B .o .S . 132, 237, 279, 524 U .S . 20, 42, 213 Aph . Materialization - 272 Aph . Matter - 229, 237, 540, 562 , 633 U .S . 80, 168, 203, 351 Aph . Matter, to - 11th April B .o .S , 203, 477, 480, 601 U .S . 351 Aph . Maturity - 258 U .S .
30 5 Maya - 57 6
Me, my - 27th Nov .
U .S . B .o .S .
98, 111, 115, 118, 134, 196, 198, 202, 203 , 208, 221, 222, 230 - 232 , 234, 241, 242, 262, 285 , 287, 295, 312, 313, 328, 342, 352, 356, 376, 469, 486, 518, 523, 558, 570, 587, 588, 642, 645, 65 8 U .S . 338 Aoh . Mean, to - 28th May ; 2nd, 25th Oct . ; 24th Dec . B .o . S 60, 306, 462, 536, 538, 584, 59 3 U .S . 173, 287, 322 Aph . Meaning - 9th Jan . B .o .S . 449, 497, 524, 65 8 U .S . Means - 15th June B .o .S . 452, 51 2 U .S . 101 Phr . Measure, to - 345 Aph . Meat - 648 U .S . Mechanical - 532 U .S . Mechanism - 152 U .S . Medinice - 468 U .S . Meditate, to - 274 Aph . Meditation - 500, 529, 540 , 593, 632 U .S . Medium - 7th July B .o .S . 172, 213, 217, 302 Aoh . Meek - 5 9 Aph . Meet, to - 29th April ; 5th July ; 2nd Nov . B .o .S . 91, 227, 59 4 U .S . 31, 60, 222, 231, 270 Aph . 43, 6 2 Phr . Melody - 23rd June B .o .S . Melt, to - 23rd July B .o .S . 42 7 U .S . Memory(ies) - 228 U .S . Mend, to - 17 U .S . Mental - 16th June B .o .S . 63 4 U .S . 209 Aph . Mentality - 363 U .S . 18 7 Aph . Mention, to - 372 U .S . 59 Aph . Merchandise - 27th Jan . B .O .S . Merciful - 4th Nov . B .o .S . 46 3 U .S . Mercy - 299, 461 U .S . 34 9 Aph . 352 Phr . Mere(ly) - 10th Nov . B .o .S . 12 7 U .S . 239 Aph . Merge, to - 562 U . S ..
(cont . Merge, to ) 321
Phr .
Merit(s) - 315, 338a 128 Message - 26th April ; 6th July ; 16th Nov . 55, 92 - 94, 118, 138, 139 259, 381, 476, 554, 569 , 570, 640, 646 70, 113, 122, 217, 287 95, 124, 129 - 142 Message-bearer - 94 Messenger(s) - 6th, 29t h July 40, 76, 94, 381, 513 66 Metal - 427 Metaphysical - 209 Metaphysician - 598 Method - 28th June Mid-course - 128 Midst - 13th Sept . 287, 452, 488 126 Might - 451 Mighty - 453 83 314 Mild - 287 Milk - 63 Million - 30th July Minaret - 1st March Mind - 3rd Jan ; 3rd March ; 28th April ; 3rd, 4th, 5th , 7th May ; 10th, 12th Nov . 152, 189, 260, 290, 363 , 370, 385, 405, 429, 430 , 460, 461, 465, 487, 511 , 564, 629, 632, 657 22, 35, 39, 131, 175, 177 , 227, 296, 302, 303, 352 5, 20, 25, 31, 86, 100 , 104, 145, 146, 154, 179 , 180, 184, 192, 270, 290 305, 310, 333, 341 Mind, to - 206, 270 Mine - 230 Mineral - 229, 604 Miniature - 262 Miracle(s) - 16th Dec . 640 Mirror - 31st Jan . Misbelief - 18th Jan . Mischievous - 148 Miserable - 6th Sept . Misery(ies) - 3rd April 452, 622, 624 311 Misfortune(s) - 6th June 429
U .S . Aph . B .o .S . , U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S .
B ;o .S .
U .S . Aph .
Phr . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . 305
30 6 Mislead, to - 18th Jan . ; 19th June Miss, to - 548 Mission - 227, 561 Mistake(s) - 29th Oct . 16, 17, 278, 451, 515, 618 349 Mistake, to - 29th Oct . Misti - 408 Mistrust - 19th June Mix, to - 31st May 237 Mo'ok, to - 50 Model - 119, 605 Modern - 160 Modest - 473 Modesty - 577 Mole Hill - 88 Moment(s) - 11th, 29th Febr . ; 26th April ; 4th Dec . 95, 191, 193, 255, 261, 285, 360, 363, 381, 386, 452, 516 24, 55, 69, 73, 88,102, 182, 303 5, 53, 327 Momentary - 29th Dec . 296 167 Money - 255, 334, 433 Monkey - 67 Monogamous - 205 Monogamy - 204 - 206, 402 Moon - 179, 272, 287, 305, 338, 623, 650 66 Moral(s) - 30th April ; 8th July 69, 195, 224, 480, 491, 532, 598, 608 180 Morality - 480, 491 Morally - 18th March More - 8th Aug . ; 10th, 27th Oct . ; 7th Nov . 11, 166, 175, 226, 231, 246, 296, 329, 334, 431, 459, 508, 516, 539, 648 95, 96, 108, 109, 218, 223, 226, 247, 282, 299, 334, 337 65, 120, 214, 219 Morn - 287 Morning - 306, 307, 368 Morrow - 270, 334 Mortal - 53 Mortality - 234, 244, 336 Most(ly) - 318, 334, 488, 616, 621, 637, 655 203, 286
306
B .o .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S .
U .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . A_oh . B .o .S . U .S . Aoh . U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S .
U .S .
Aoh . Phr . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph .
U .S . Moth - 263 Mother - 9th Sept . B .O .S . U .S . 139, 229, 401 U .S . Motherhood - 229 Motion - 25th, 33th June ; B .o .S . 16th Dec . Motionless - 6th Dec . B .O .S . B .O .S . Motive - 26th, 31st May 169 Aph . U .S . Motto - 240 Mould, to - 119 U .S . Mount, to - 618 U .S . Mountain(s) - 88, 467 U .S . 6, 163 Aph . Mouth - 8th May B .O .S . 274, 358 U .S . B .O .S . Move, to - 1st, 3rd Nov . 77, 523, 642 U .S . Aph . 351 Movement - 207, 461 U .S . Much - 2nd, 28th Nov . B .o .S . 238, 277, 406, 484, 548 , 586, 613 U .S . 147, 226 Aph . Mud - 2nd Nov . B .o .S . 623 U .S . Aph . 233 Munir - 287 Phr . Mureed(s) - 196, 230, 518 , 588, 619 U .S . Murshid(s) - 20th Sept . B .O .S . 125, 181, 516, 569, 577 , 619 U .S . 101, 192 Phr . Phr . Musavir - 93 Muscular - 648 U .S . Music - 23rd June B .o .S . U .S . 80, 240, 262, 586 Aph . 102, 113 Musical - 23rd June B .O .S . U .S . 262 Musician - 262, 589 U .S . Must - 7th Jan . ; 21st May ; 28th, 30th June ; 2nd, 6th July ; 11th, 19th, 26th Sept . ; 19th, 22nd Oct . ; 2nd, 3rd, 26th Nov . B .o .S . 3, 55, 71, 84, 89, 93, 106 , 135, 162, 182, 216, 224 , 227, 240, 303, 335, 336 , 354, 371, 377, 381, 443 , 448, 454, 521, 527, 532 , 554, 567, 582, 596, 599 , 620, 621, 625, 648, 649 , 652 U .S . 17, 54, 94, 100, 106, 187 , 200, 228, 237, 266, 301 , 310, 337, 345 Aph . 58, 175 Phr . Mystery(ies) - 248, 635 U .S .
30 7 (cont . Mystery(ies) ) 149, 297, 327 Mystic(s) - 7th Jan . ; 24th
Aph .
April ; 12th May ; 25th June ; 17th Oct .
457, 531, 589, 603 4, 7, 11, 161, 305 Mystical - 30th April Mysticism - 3rd, 5th Febr . ; 17th, 18th Oct . 374, 531 256
B .o .S .
U .S . Aph . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph .
Nail, to - 504 U .S . Name (s) - 2nd Jan . ; 13t h Febr . ; 25th, 31st March ; 20th June ; 14th, 28th Aug . ; 28th Oct . B .o .S . 55, 68a U .S . 104, 178, 234, 271 Aph . Napoleon - 204 U .S . Narciss - 263 U .S . Narrow - 21st Oct . B .o .S . 201 U .S . Narrow-minded - 201 U .S . Narrowness - 10th Aug . ; 19th Nov . B .O .S . Nations - 608 U .S . Natural(ly) - 2nd May ; 5th , 9th July ; 20th Nov . B .O .S . Nature - 21st Jan . ; 7th Febr . ; 1st March ; 3rd July ; 12th , 13th Aug . ; 5th Oct . B .o .S . 1, 61, 75, 88 - 90, 106 , 213, 214, 249, 251, 256, 264, 265, 282, 334, 381 , 402, 408, 448, 535, 597 U .S . 30, 43, 54, 61, 127, 144 , 148, 183, 203, 214, 233 , 262, 272, 324, 329 Aph . Near(ly) - 16th Febr . ; 25t h April B .o .S . 186, 227 U .S . 18, 116 Aph . Necessary, necessarily - 6t h Jan . ; 13th Febr . ; 4th may ; 5th July ; 20th Aug . ; 3r d Oct . ; 19th Nov . B .o .S . 110, 188, 202, 296, 422 , 443, 448, 532, 655 U .S . 190, 319 Aph . 111 Phr . Necessity - 3rd Oct . B .o .S . 301 Aph . Nectar 237 U .S . Need (s) - 174, 360a, 373 , 490, 660 U .S . 347 Aph . 50, 178 Phr .
Need, to - 2nd May ; 15th , 18th July ; 26th Dec . B .o .S . 227, 444, 474, 478, 599 U .S . 87, 98, 148, 182, 191, 258 , 261, 307 Aph . 9, 37, 49, 52, 63, 113 , 116, 118, 133, 177, 179 , 180, 205, 267, 365, 368 Phr . Neighbour - 15th Dec . B .o .S . Nerve(s) - 293, 294 Phr . Nervous - 648 U .S . Never - 5th Febr . ; 30th March ; 9th, 24th May ; 16th, 19th July ; 19th Sept . ; 13th Nov . ; 2nd, 16th, 29th Dec . B .o .S . 5, 112, 220, 323, 329, 348 , 382, 424, 454, 564, 607 , 622, 651 U .S . 53, 93, 245, 335, 346 Aph . New - 77, 224, 305, 571 U .S . 150, 165, 210 Phr . Next - 138, 274 U .S . 256, 324 Aph . Night - 227, 287, 300, 449 , 625, 648 U .S . 234 Aph . Nirvana - 522, 641 U .S . 201, 263, 322 Aph . Nobility - 13th Sept . B .o .S . 334, 544 U .S . 276 Aph . Noble 105 U .S . Nobleness - 13th Sept . B .o .S . Nobody - 7th June S .o .S . Noise 76 Aph . Noisiness - 145 Aph . Non-existent - 5th Jan . B .O .S . 125 Aph . No, non, not - 3rd, 7th, 8t h Nov . ; 12th, 15th Dec . B .o .S . 21, 40, 45, 61, 71, 97 , 102, 146, 181, 195, 201, 203, 205, 213, 214, 221, 227, 231, 239, 241, 242, 244, 250, 270, 271, 275, 278, 289, 290, 292, 296, 319, 334, 340, 343, 347, 353, 366, 367, 373, 377, 380, 381, 383, 386, 391 393, 401, 403, 405, 410, 427, 434, 441, 442, 445, 449, 450, 452, 453, 455, 458, 465, 466, 474, 477, 478, 481, 490, 500, 504, 515, 516, 529, 531 - 533, 535, 538, 540 - 543, 546, 558, 563, 581, 582, 584, 586, 589, 597, 598, 600, 601, 608, 612, 615, 616, 307
308 (cont . No, non, not) 622, 624, 625, 627, 629 - 631, 634, 640, 641, 644, 645 , 654, 656, 657, 660 U .S . None - 114, 289 Aph . No one - 5th Jan . ; 12th May ; 16th Dec . B .o .S . 114 - 116, 163, 223, 247 , 605 U .S . 289 Aph . 69 Phr . Noor 338 U .S . Ndte(s) - 7th May B .o .S . 451, 534, 554 U .S . 25, 338 Aph . Nothing - 29th Jan . ; 18th Febr . ; 31st-March ; 1st Aprils 19th July ; 3rd Oct . ; 12th Nov . B .o .S . 27, 116, 312, 347, 376, 377, 384, 398, 402, 416, 451, U .S . 453, 504, 598, 642, 65 7 43, 92, 123, 135, 141, 144, 166, 171, 193, 201, 211, 237, 250, 258, 279, 351 Aph . Phr . 18 2 U .S . Nothingness - 275 Nourish, to - 262, 468 U .S . U .S . Novice - 57 6 Now - 54, 109, 270, 434, 506, U .S . 532, 59 9 Aph . 225, 250 Phr . 32 2 Nowhere - 69 Aph . U .S . Number - 206, 454 Numberless - 454 U .S . U .S . Nut(s) - 61 7
Obey, to - 15 8 Object ( s) - 12th March ; 27th April ; 26th May ; 24th Oct . 59, 560, 608 , 628, 632 69, 122, 21 1 316 Objective - 14 Obligation ( s) - 223 Oblige, to - 206 Obscure, to - 90 Obse rv ation - 30th June 330, 33 3 202 Observe, to - 151, 240, 317, 330, 33 6 106 Obtain, to - 26th May ; 25th Jul y Occult - 22nd April 10 7 Occultism - 643 308
Phr . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . Aph . Aph . U .S . Anh . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S Aph B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S .
Occupation - 19th Oct . B .O .S . 629 U .S . B .O .S . Occupy, to - 26th Nov . 72 U .S . 140 Aph . Ocean - 26th March ; 10t h April B .O .S . 266, 446, 503 U .S . 132, 163, 292 Aph . B .o .S . Off - 20th Febr . 441 U .S . 250, 320 Aph . Offence - 267 U .S . Offend, to - 33, 409 U .S . Offer, to - 11th April B .o .S . 114, 284, 329 U .S . 21, 148, 282 Aph . Offering - 11th April B .o .S . 337 U .S . Often - 25th March ; 2nd May ; 28th, 30th Oct . ; 19th Nov . ; 20th Dec . B .o,S . 14, 26, 88, 97, 120, 207 , 218, 278, 616 U .S . 64, 130, 216, 231 Aph . Oil - 20th Sept . B .o .S . 629 U .S . Oil, to - 648 U .S . Old, elder - 381 U .S . 208 Aph . Omar Khayyam - 12th May B .o .S . Once - 1st May ; 9th June ; 28th Nov . B .o .S . 121, 146, 206, 245, 274 , 296, 364, 504, 612, 651 U .S . 130, 135, 188, 269, 327 Aph . One - 1st, 2nd Jan . ; 22nd March ; 30th May ; 29th, 30th July ; 5th, 7th, 9th Aug . ; 7th, 20th, 23rd, 27th Sept . ; 16th, 21st, 30th Oct . ; 18th B .o .S . Nov . ; 15th Dec . 51, 88, 128, 139, 150, 184 , 193, 206, 230, 276, 288, 318, 343, 353, 365, 452, 467, 477, 478, 488, 532, 540, 552, 561, 572, 585, 608, 629, 630, 641, 649 , 652 U .S . 19, 31, 70, 129, 132, 179, 182, 199, 257, 271, 302 , 304, 307, 321, 326 Aph . 128 Phr . Oneness - 27th July B .o .S . Onesided - 500 U .S . Only - 7th Jan . ; 18th, 22nd , 25th March ; 9th, 10th, 11th April ; 5th May ; 5th, 20th, 27th, 30th June ; 14th, 18th, 28th July ; 13th,
30 9 (cont . Only) 28th, 30th (cont . Other(s)) 288, 316, Oct . ; 7th Nov . ; 2nd, 6th, 334, 366, 386, 413, 414, 29th, 31st Dec . B .o .S . 425, 432, 436, 451, 486, 1, 9, 55, 65, 141, 205, 213, 492, 498, 502, 541, 543, 242, 262, 309, 334, 347, 572, 586, 592, 601, 610, 363, 372, 398, 441, 453, 613, 616, 630, 638, 645 , 454, 490, 500, 503, 513, 649, 658 U .S . 520, 527, 532, 540, 557, 34, 40, 54, 57, 92, 100 , 575, 586, 601, 607, 608, 103, 140, 143, 199, 226 , 643, 654, 658, 660 U .S . 240, 264, 289, 306, 352 Aph . 58, 60, 64, 70, 85, 91, 106, 87, 205, 227, 230, 369 Phr . 122, 157, 164, 180, 214, Otherwise - 17th May B .o .S 217, 226, 228, 240, 242, Out - 363, 463, 624 U .S . 254, 260, 264, 268, 287, 192, 260, 307, 338 Aph . 289, 302, 304, 317, 321, 262, 270 Phr . 333, 338 Aph . Outer - 19th July B .O .S Open - 6th April ; 7th, 12th 374 U .S . June ; 17th, 26th Nov . B .o .S . 30, 102, 173 Aph . 134, 137, 154, 325, 359, Outlet - 64 U .S . 381, 449, 451 U .S . Outlook - 3rd June ; 9th Nov . B .o .S 173, 174, 268 Phr . 83 U .S . Open, to - 16th, 21st April ; 230, 330 Aph . 15th June ; 17th, 27th Sept . ; Outpouring - 653 U .S . 4th, 5th Nov . B .o .S . 'Outside - 14th July B .o .S 66, 233, 358, 448, 452, 516, 233, 477, 624 U .S . 558, 621 U .S . 189, 190, 281 Aph . 43, 114 Aph . Outward(ly) - 30th June B .o .S 68, 186, 226, 267, 269, 306, 446 U .S . 178, 197 Aph . 307, 345 Phr . Opening - 500 U .S . Over - 161, 182 Phr . Opinion - 492 U .S . Over-circulation - 150 U .S . 345 Aph . Overcome, to - 145 U .S . Opponent(s) - 469 U .S . Overlook, to - 20th March ; B .o .S Opportunity - 22nd, 29th 19th Aug . Febr . B .o .S . Overshadow, to - 18th July B .o .S 95, 261, 469 U .S . Overtake, to - 429 U .S . 148, 282 Aph . Overwhelm, to - 29th Jan . B .c .S 386 U .S . Oppose, to - 126 Aph . Opposite - 13th July B .o .S . Owe, to - 459 U .S . 129 U .S . Own - 8th, 16th, 25th, 29t h 28 Anh . Jan . ; 7th, 16th Febr . ; 4th, Opposition(s) - 10th Dec . B .o .S . 5th March ; 30th April ; 3rd, 381 U .S . 22nd, 27th May ; 4th, 23r d Orchid(s) - 18 U .S . June ; 7th, 8th, 12th, 14th Organ(s) - 279 U .S . July ; 18th Aug . ; 8th, 19th, Organization - 572 U .S . 26th Sept . ; 29th Nov . ; B .o .S Origin - 300, 335 U .S . 21st, 23rd Dec . Original - 236 Aph . 21, 39, 42, 68, 84, 99 , Other(s) - 8th Jan . ; 24th 132, 143, 160, 165, 202, March ; 4th April ; 3rd, 22nd 210, 245, 247, 299, 385, May ; 6th, 23rd, 27th, 28th 405, 413, 417, 432, 448, June ; 4th, 5th, 8th, 17th, 458, 463, 466, 469, 503 , 20th, 29th July ; 5th, 18th, 566, 622, 624, 636 U .S . 19th Aug . ; 1st, 5th, 6th, 66, 88, 106, 108, 127, 176, 23rd, 26th Sept . ; 4th, 7th, 189, 221, 242, 248, 262 , 31st Oct . ; 3rd Nov . ; 2nd, 266, 269, 273, 309, 327 Aph . 28th Dec . B .o .S . 160, 184, 250, 266 Phr . 33, 51, 62, 65, 72, 76, 84, Own, to - 191 U .S . 98, 104, 105, 128, 137, 171 , 191, 195, 230, 239, 252, 309
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.
.
.
.
. . .
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31 0 Page(s) - 17th Nov . B .o .S . 449 U .S . Pain(s) - 29th, 30th Jan . ; 1st Febr . ; 15th, 21st June ; 15th Aug . ; 4th Sept . ; 15t h Oct . B .o .S . 191, 228, 268, 293, 440, 449, 451, 506, 507, 647 U .S . 28, 29, 264, 311 Aoh . Paint, to - 605 U .S . Painter - 605 U .S . Painting - 605 U .S . Palmistry - 533 U .S . Pan 629 U .S . Paper 449 U .S . Paralyze, to - 319 Aoh . Parent(s) - 170 Aph . Parrot 449 U .S . Part - 10th April ; 25th July ; 21st Nov . B .o .S . 80, 564, 593, 631 U .S . 102, 247, 294, 299, 320 Aph . 369 Phr . Partake, to - 19th Aug . B .O .S . 4 U .S . Particular - 26th May B .o .S . 80, 99, 645 U .S . Partition - 290 U .S . Partner - 299 U .S . Pass, to - 12th April ; 8t h Aug . B .O .S . 32, 55, 118, 138, 219, 227 , 360, 381, 437, 555, 580 , 616 U .S . 56, 226, 237, 240, 244, 271, 289, 320, 324, 333 Aph . 62, 349 Phr . Passion(s) - 26th Febr . ; 28th April ; 26th Aug . B .o .S . 269, 285, 299, 330 U .S . Passivity - 289 U .S . Past - 11th July B .o .S . 109, 270, 271, 334, 358 , 359, 443, 559, 617, 618 , 642 U .S . 270 Phr . Pat, to - 67, 442 U .S . Path(s) - 20th Febr . ; 25th , 26th May ; 18th June ; 26t h Aug . ; 7th Oct . ; 23rd Dec . B .o .S . 84, 85, 101, 113, 177, 355 , 361, 381, 386, 443, 470, 491, 527, 536, 540, 556, 567, 569, 601, 602, 620 , 627 U .S . 33, 58, 200, 213, 231, 247, 278, 297, 352 Aph . 24, 33, 36, 46, 55, 56, 71, 132, 156, 157, 161, 169 , 189, 196, 197, 201, 203, 310
(cont . Path(s)) 210, 217, 218, 224, 226 , 266, 269 , 276, 281 Phr . Patience - 5th June B .O .S . 291 Aph . 164, 235, 313 Phr . Patient ( ly) - 2nd Nov . B .O .S . 191, 227 U .S . Pay, to - 15th , 21st, 28th Aug . ; 24th Sept . B .o .S . Peace - 12th Jan . ; 2nd, 25th July B .o .S . 53, 60, 93, 104 , 138, 260 , 374, 452, 537 , 569, 599 , 646 U .S . 188, 190, 286 , 327 Aph . 30, 82, 83, 85 , 144, 179 , 180, 184, 232, 233, 254, 299, 303, 315 , 316, 335 , 336, 346, 355 Phr . Peaceful - 80, 88, 192, 300 Phr . Pearl - 28th Jan . B .o .S . 73, 404 U .S .Peculiar - 15th Jan . B .o .S . Peculiarity - 209 U .S . Penalty - 410 U .S . Pendent - 459 U .S . Penetrate , to - 330 U .S . 29, 327 Aph . Penetration - 330 U .S . People ( s) - 8th Jan . ; 22n d May ; 17th Aug . B .o .S . 19, 35a, 54, 98, 205, 209 , 272 - 274 , 281, 353, 357, 426, 45C , 459, 472, 586 , 627, 644 U .S . 150 Aph . 1, 81, 280 Phr . Pepper 339 U .S . Perceive , to - 6th, 13th June B .o .S . Perception - 330 U .S . 232, 328 Aph . Perfect , to - 12th Jan . B .o .S . 338a, 490, 563, 599, 660 U .S . Perfect (ly) - 12th Jan . ; 22n d May ; B .o .S . 123, 244, 381, 387, 467 , 468, 523, 642, 647, 654 U .S . 61, 69, 127, 129 , 137, 172, 252, 253, 313, 324 Aph . 86, 93, 95 Phr . Perfection - 30th March ; 1st, 8th April ; 18th May ; 15th , 19th July B .o .S . 68, 70, 128, 135 , 141, 276 , 284, 299, 341 , 447, 471, 490, 540, 573 , 581, 607 , 635, 660 U .S . 62, 68, 88, 127 , 204, 252 ,
31 1 (cont . Perfection) 253, 271 , Aph . 289, 314 54, 73, 191, 224, 262, 350 Phr . Performance - 586 U .S . Perhaps - 434 U .S . Period(s) - 17th Aug . B .o .S . 103 U .S . 167 Aph . Perish, to - 138 Aoh . Perpetual - 30th June B .o .S . 319 Phr . Perplexity - 19 Aph . Persist, to - 1 Aph . Person - 11th April ; 25th, 26th May B .o .S . 15, 20, 36, 44, 80, 84, 99, 106, 132, 206, 216, 277 279, 294, 324, 382, 383, 386, 390, 391, 401, 416, 441, 456, 467, 473, 497, 504, 514, 524, 533, 574, 613, 616, 625, 630 U .S . 16, 21, 22, 42, 60, 86, 93, 96, 98, 112, 117, 194, 207, 225, 256, 270, 277, 297, 303, 306, 332, 341, 351 Aph . Phr . 43 Personal(ly) - 441, 541 U .S . Personality - 7th Febr . ; 17th July B .o .S . 43, 64, 94, 96, 107, 120, 265, 280, 381, 391, 476, 491 U .S . 16, 255, 268, 276, 277, 300, 325, 345, 349 Aoh . U .S . Pertain, to - 94 Phase(s) - 229 U .S . 226, 236 Aph . Phenomenon(a) - 144 Aph . Philosophy - 3rd Febr . B .o .S . 627 U .S . 57 Aoh . Physical - 16th June B .O .S . 316, 512, 625, 648 U .S . 38, 209 Aph . Physician - 648 U .S . B .o .S . Pick, to - 19th Febr . 35a U .S . Picture(s) - 14th April ; 3rd Dec . B .O .S . U .S . 271, 290, 387, 605, 630 Picture, to - 16th Dec . B .o .S . Piece - 87, 435, 514 U .S . Pierce, to - 20th July B .o .S . Piety - 12th Febr . B .o .S . 482 U .S . B .o .S . Pious - 13th Jan . Pit(s) - 167, 386 U .S . Pitch - 324, 381 U .S . Pitiable - 239 U .S .
Pity - 351 Aph . Pity, to - 425, 437 U .S . 96 Aph . Place - 23rd July B .o .S . 45, 338, 338a, 347, 504 , 616 U .S . 40, 49, 92, 109, 144, 192 , 195, 206, 262, 286 Aph . Place, to - 12th June B .O .S . 488 U .S . 262 Aph . Plain - 19th Dec . B .o .S . Plan - 12th Aug . B .o .S . 204, 461 U .S . Plane(s) - 16th June B .o .S . 237, 512 U .S . 56, 95, 134, 173, 248, 302 , 321 Aph . 139 Phr . Planet(s) - 561, 623 U .S . 177 Aph . 280 Phr . Planetary - 338 U .S . Plant(s) - 8th April B .o .S . 178, 281, 440, 444, 473 , 654 U .S . 91, 163 Aph . Plant, to - 2nd Aug . B .o .S . Play, to - 102, 247 Aph . Player - 239 U .S . Playground - 419 U .S . Playing - 80 U .S . Pleasant - 47 U .S . Please, to - 193, 371, 372 , 451, 477, 627 U .S . 268 Aoh . Pleasure(s) - 31st Jan ; 24t h Febr . ; 15th June ; 19th July ; 4th Sept . ; 28th Dec . B .o .S . 147, 191, 194, 268, 451 U .S . 60, 264, 350 Aph . 157 Phr . Aph . Pliable - 187 Plough, to - 21st Febr . B .o .S . Plunge, to - 30th Sept . B .o .S . Poet - 589 U .S . Poetry - 381 U .S . B .o .S . Point(s) - 10th Nov . 447, 616, 649 U .S . 141 Aph . B .o .S . Point of view - 8th July 83, 434 U .S . Aph . 6, 103 Poise, to - 191 U .S . Poison - 31st May B .o .S . 36, 87, 135, 237, 266, 436 U .S . 54 Aph . U .S . Poisonous - 87 Poligamy - 400 U .S . Political - 224 U .S . 311
31 2 Politics - 608 U .S . Poor - 272, 381, 630 U .S . 276 Aph . Port 227 U .S . Position - 29th June ; 3r d Aug . B .o .S . 250, 504 U .S . 60, 276 Aph . Possess, to - 29, 243, 453 U .S . 21, 121, 128, 276 Aph . Possessor - 59, 128 Aph . Possibility - 172 Phr . Possible - 16th Oct . B .o .S . '55, 443, 620 U .S . Pour, to - 170 U .S . 97 Aph . Poverty - 29th Jan . ; 16th May B .o .S . 282 U .S . 96 Aph . Power(s) - 7th, 21st Jan . ; 10, 15th, 29th June ; 14th July ; 8th, 13th, 17th, 21st Sept . ; 15th Oct . ; 4th Nov . B .o .S . 5, 29, 34, 64, 77, 102, 103 , 107, 117, 283, 314, 370, 381, 412, 444, 461, 467, 492, 503, 504, 512, 514 , 540, 552, 635, 642, 655 U .S . 73, 82, 83, 99, 169, 188 , 232, 337 Aph . 15, 101, 105, 160, 164, 182, 206, 207, 209, 229, 236 248, 301, 338, 340 - 342, 345, 347 - 349, 353, 354 , 363 Phr . Powerful - 7th Sept . ; 30th Nov . B .o .S . 24, 337 Aph . Practical - 275 U .S . 319 Aph . Practice - 215 U .S . Practise, to - 527, 612 U .S . 87, 314 Aph . Praise(s) - 31st March ; .13t h July B .o .S . 182, 229 U .S . 274 Aph . Praise, to - 21st March ; 1s t April ; 6th Nov . B .o .S . 182 U .S . Pray, to - 399, 478, 575 U .S . Pray upon, to - 451 U .S . Prayer(s) - 18th March ; 25th Aug . ; 22nd Oct . ; 4th, 25th , 29th Nov . B .O .S . 103, 284, 352 U .S . 108, 179, 273, 347 Aph . Prayerful - 163 Aph . Precious - 28th Jan . ; 9th , 16th Aug . B .o .S . 312
(cont . Precious ) 404, 602 64, 291 Preciousness - 76 Predominant - 339 Prefer, to - 351 Preferable - 108, 390 Prejudice - 6th March Preparation - 321, 447 182 Prepare, to - 21st Febr . ; 14th June ; 23rd A .ig . ; 11th Nov . 575 187, 190 101, 106, 117, 175 Presence - 120, 285, 286 , 498 41, 143, 302 Present - 270, 271, 363 , 559, 608, 642 270 Present, to - 411 Preserve, to - 111 Prevail, to - 499 Price - 15th, 21st Aug . 63 Prick, to - 17th July Pride - 1st July 287 4, 181 Priest - 21st Febr . ; 2nd March 598 Primitiveness - 10th Aug . Principal - 474 Principle(s) - 15th Jan . ; 18th Oct . 374, 402, 422 94, 106, 180, 202, 203 Prison - 328 Privilege(s) - 17th Dec . 46, 91, 200, 621 114, 219 Prize - 293
U .S . Aph . Aph . Aph . Aph . U .S . B .O .S . U .S . Aph .
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . Aph . U .S . Phr . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .O .S . Aph . B .o .S . B .O .S . U .S . Aph . B .O .S . U .S . B .O .S . U .S . B .o .5 . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S .
Probe, to - 16th April
B ..o .S .
454 42 Problem(s) - 21, 37, 286 , 649 Proceed, to - 101, 113, 540 210, 278 Process - 3rd Nov . 239, 291 Produce, to - 7th May ; 18t h June 107, 159, 209, 224, 240 , 385, 463, 485 186, 227, 338 79
U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . Phr . B .O .S . Aoh . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr .
31 3 Productive - 83 Profit - 36, 116 Profit, to - 95
Phr . U .S . U .S .
Profitable - 149
Aph . B .O .S . U .S .
Progress - 7th Nov .
253, 400, 474, 500, 527 27, 99, 234 Progress, to - 515 88 249, 271 - 276 Progressive - 351 44, 170, 234 Promise - 288 Promise, to - 227, 288
Aph . U .S . Aph . Phr . Aph . Phr . U .S . U .S .
178 Prompt, to - 23rd Sept .
Phr . B .O .S .
Proof - 280, 640 111, 307 Proper(ly) - 347, 449 206 108, 109, 117 Property - 21, 413 44 Prophet(s) - 21st Febr . 40, 49, 76, 94, 280, 381 , 475, 476, 502, 650 6, 204, 302, 344 Prophetic - 443, 620 298, 301 Propose, to - 12th Aug . Prostitute(s) - 205
U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . Aph . B .o .S .
Prostrate, to - 19th April
B .o .S .
192 Prostration - 287 Protect, to - 75 Protection - 181, 182 Protector - 453 Protestant - 107 Proud - 46, 354 181 Prove, to - 6th July ; 10th Aug . ; 18th Oct . 405, 513, 552
U .S . U .S . Phr . Phr . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph .
8, 25, 118, 270, 352
U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S .
B .O .S . U .S .
Aph .
Provide, to - 428 U .S . 133 Phr . Providence - 3, 9, 11, 13, 17 , 18, 21, 26, 37, 39, 43, 47 , 49, 50, 52, 58, 62, 173 -
180, 220, 240, 335 Psychic - 22nd Aoril 107, 512 Psychology - 213, 214 Pull, to - 1st June 56, 222 Punishment - 303, 385 Pupil(s) - 6th, 22nd, 27t h March ; 19th Sept . ; 30th Oct . 340, 528, 575
Phr . B .o .S . U .S . U .S .
B .O .S . U .S . U .S .
B .O .S .
Pupilship - 30th Oct . B .o .S . Pure - 13th Febr . ; 29th Aug . B .o .S . 468, 580, 641 U .S . 132, 233 Aph . 121 Phr . Pureness - 468 U .S . Purification - 25th Dec . B .o .S . 107 U .S . Purify, to - 4th Febr . ; 17th • June ; 30th Sept . B .o .S . 133, 349 Aph . 216, 238, 239 Phr . Purity - 31st Oct . B .O .S . 289, 468 U .S . 132, 201 Aph . Purpose - 3rd May ; 24th June ; 7th, 26th July ; 3rd, 6th , 9th Oct . B .o .S . 89, 124a, 207, 227, 290 292, 296, 299, 321, 505 , 529, 563, 587 U .S . 92, 109, 119, 126, 127 , 134, 148, 204, 207, 211 , 257, 268, 285, 311 Aph . 98, 106, 116, 133, 156 , 165, 193 - 195, 236, 277 279, 287, 305, 318 Phr . Pursue, to - 26 U .S . 41 Aph . Pursuit - 10th March ; 2n d Nov . B .O .S . 66, 262 U .S . Push, to - 164 U .S . Put, to - 24th Aug . B .o .S . 36, 54, 164, 201, 342, 366, 426, 531, 645 U .S . 250, 260, 266, 304 Aph .
Qadir - 168, 249 Phr . Qualification(s) - 268, 276 Aph . Qualify, to - 277 Aph . 209 Phr . Quality - 22nd, 30th June B .O .S . Quest 230 Aph . Question(s) - 255, 318, 370 372, 506 U .S . 7, 53, 248, 257, 302, 346 Aph . Quick(ly) - 5, 629 U .S . Quicken, to - 12th July ; 15th Aug . B .O .S . 287 U .S . Quickening - 293 U .S . Quiet 434 U .S . 146 Aph . Quiet, to - 184 Phr . Quite 626 U .S . 357 Phr . Qur'an 290 U .S .
U .S .
313
31 4 Race - 21st Oct . B .O .S . 338a, 608 U .S . 295 Aph . Radiance - 26th Jan . B .O .S . 658 U .S . 278 Aph . Radiate, to - 26th Jan . B .o .S . 317, 332 Phr . Rag(s) - 19th Jan . B .o .S . Rain 654 U .S . 320 Aoh . Raindrops - 198 U .S . Raise, to - 18th May ; 8th ยงept . B .o .S . 157, 164, 167, 211, 230 , 285, 330, 370, 621, 632 U .S . 78, 161 Aph . 18, 85, 208, 258, 321, 323 Phr . Range - 10th April B .O .S . 4 Aph . Rank(s) - 504 U .S . 271, 276 Aph . Rare 637 U .S . 182 Aph . Rassoul - 561 U .S . Rather - 15th June B .o .S . 16, 46, 57, 185, 551 U .S . 187 Aph . Ray(s) - 276, 408 U .S . 12, 50, 323 Aph . Reach - 141, 242 U .S . Reach, to - 29th April ; 2nd , 25th Nov . B .o .S . 227, 471, 479, 538, 581 , 616, 621 U .S . 173, 229, 258, 271 Aph . React, to - 78 U .S . Reaction - 78, 379 U .S . 30 Aph . Read, to - 449 U .S . 302 Aph . Readiness - 45, 256 Aph . Ready, readily - 3rd March ; 23rd May ; 6th, 16th Oct . ; 26th Nov . B .o .S . 138, 164, 267, 317, 369 , 381 U .S . Real(ly) - 9th Jan . ; 11th Febr . ; 6th, 15th, 25th March ; 27th April ; 16th, 20th May ; 24th, 28th, 30th June ; 25th July ; 22nd, 23rd Sept . ; 7th, 14th, 25th Oct . ; 5th Nov . ; 9th, 29th Dec . B .O .S . 8, 12, 193, 243, 280, 294 , 309, 353, 465, 497, 507 , 527, 567, 576 U .S . 9, 25, 49, 85, 101, 163 , 214, 243, 250, 327 Aph . 228 Phr . 314
Reality(ies) - 27th April ; 30th July ; 6th Aug . ; 29th Sept . ; 9th Oct . ; 24th Nov . ; 29th Dec . B .o .S . 9, 15, 43, 68, 110, 157 , 290, 294, 297, 446, 455 , 603 U .S . 1, 210, 238, 254 Aph . Realization - 12th, 16th , 24th March ; 6th, 21st May ; 25th Aug . ; 20th, 24th Oct . B .o .S . 76, 215, 460, 504, 550 , 581, 634 U .S . 46, 64, 92, 127, 182, 205, 263, 295, 352 Aph . Realize, to - 9th Jan . ; 7th Febr . ; 12th March ; 19th April ; 30th June ; 25th Sept . ; 16th, 24th Oct . B .o .S . 16, 87, 141, 226, 288, 431 ,
492, 527, 532, 557, 564 , 634, 638 U .S . 3, 143, 173, 176, 199, 246, 259, 282, 322 Aph . 172 Phr . Realm - 16th April B .o .S . 322 Aph . Reap, to - 15th, 21st Febr . B .o .S . 54 Aph . Rear, to - 87 U .S . Reason - 22nd, 23rd Jan . ; 11th, 18th Oct . ; 23rd Nov . B .o .S . 125, 164, 181, 295, 296 , 356, 510, 643 U .S . 306, 317 Aph . Reasoning - 22 Aph . Reassure, to - 212 U .S . Rebel, to - 250, 590 U .S . Reborn 497 U .S . Receive, to - 28th March ; 1s t May ; 27th June ; 24th Sept . ; 6th Oct . ; 26th Nov . B .O .S . 74, 166, 239, 289, 420 , 558 U .S . 187, 215, 229 Aph . 33, 64 Phr . Receiver - 30th Aug . B .o .S . Receptacle(s) - 70, 122 Aph . 248 Phr . Receptive - 74 U .S . Reciprocity - 67, 315 U .S . Recognition - 7th April B .O .S . Recognize, to - 250, 335, 357 , 401, 477, 618, 657 U .S . 305 Aph . Reconstruction - 103 U .S . Record(s) - 7th May B .o .S . 169 U .S . 271 Aph . Red 659 U .S .
31 5 Reed - 22nd Nov . Refine, to - 60
B .O .S . Aph .
Refinement - 184 Reflect, to - 8th April ; June 4, 154, 183, 316, 379,
B .o .S . U .S .
Repair, to - 651 Repeat, to - 169 Repeating - 273 Repentance - 23rd July 410 Repetition - 349
U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . U .S .
Aph .
Replacement - 338
U .S .
Phr . B .O .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S .
Repose - 468 Represent, to - 502 Repugnance - 1st May Repulse, to - 220
U .S . U .S . B .o .S . Aph .
Reputation - 22, 252
U .S .
Aph . 15t h 619
114, 185, 300 92, 307, 314 Reflection - 14th April 326 Reformer - 21st Febr . Refrain, to - 29 Refuse, to - 139, 420 Regain, to - 236 Regard - 24th Febr . Regard, to - 130 34, 60 Regularity - 468 Rejoice, to - 9th July ; 28th Nov . Relation - 31 170, 177, 199 Relationship - 199 Relativity - 297 Release, to - 217, 315 Reliance - 639 Relief - 647 Relieve, to - 26th Sept . 647 216 Religion(s) - 8th, 16th, 20t h Jan . ; 3rd, 20th Febr . ; 2n d April ; 20th, 30th May ; 21s t July ; 17th, 19th Oct . ; 18t h Nov . 73, 128, 474, 480, 491 , 501 538, 633 57, 87, 104, 173, 180, 203 , 313, 326, 352 Religious - 20th Febr . ; 30t h May 103, 224, 610 Remain, to - 607, 651 56, 135, 349 Remarks - 477 Remedy - 15th Oct . Remember, to - 173 202, 216 Remove, to - 13th June 467, 492 230 Render, to - 383 Renounce, to - 19th Febr . ; 15th, 16th May ; 8th No v . 381
288 Renunciation(s) - 19th Febr . ; 3rd Oct . 113, 330, 447 87, 228, 264, 288, 314
B .o .S . U .S . Aoh . Aph . U .S . Phr . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Phr .
B .o .S . , U .S . Aph . B .O .S . U .S . U .S . Aoh . U .S . B .O .S . U .S . Aph . B .O .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
Aph . B .O .S . U .S . Aoh' .
Require, to - 15th July B .o .S . 443, 514 U .S . Research - 3rd Nov . B .o .S . Resentment - 6th March B .o .S . Reserve - 96, 360 U .S . Reserve, to - 265 U .S . Reservoir - 314 U .S . Reside, to - 255 U .S . 314 Aph . Resign, to - 109, 299, 443 , 620 U .S . Resignation - 268, 443 U .S . Resist, to - 5, 289 U .S . Resistance - 289 U .S . Respect - 11th April B .o .S . 105, 403 U .S . Respect, to - 334, 403, 498 , 545, 638 U .S . Respond, to - 138 U .S . 115 Aph . 151 Phr . Respondent - 305 Phr . Response - 239, 619 U .S . 215, 217, 320 Aph . Responsibility - 102, 299 Aph . Responsive - 74, 283 U .S . B .o .S . Rest - 4th May 286 Aph . 5, 86, 89, 146, 180, 293 , 294, 299 Phr . Rest, to - 583 U .S . Phr . 301 Restful - 300 Phr . Restless - 12th Nov . B .o .S . 370 U .S . Restlessness - 145 Aph . Restrain(t) - 595 U .S . Restrict, to - 627 U .S . Result - 30th May ; 2nd July ; B .O .S . 12th Nov . 27, 275, 338, 596, 643 U .S . 165, 281 Aph . Result, to - 78, 108, 142 , 147 U .S . U .S . Resurrection - 257, 290 Retain, to - 2nd Aug . B .o .S . Retention - 64 U .S . Retirement 315
31 6 Reveal, to - 3rd July 12 5 329 129, 143, 156 Revelation(s) - 1st Jan . ;
10th May ; 25th Aug . 65 3
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . S .O .S . U .S . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
(cont . Road ) 212 200 Roar , to - 17th April
Aph . Phr . B .o .S .
Rob, to - 76
Aph .
Rock(s) - 1st Febr . ; 27th June 299, 427, 473 160, 187 Roman Catholic - 107 Romance - 225, 350 Roof - 158 Root(s) - 14th Jan . ; 2n d April ; 2nd Nov . ; 21st Dec . 300, 610 65 Root out, to - 4th Dec .
187 Revenge - 173 Reverence - 11th April Revivify, to - 133 238, 239 Reward - 15th May ; 30th Aug . 100, 113, 385, 435, 509 Rhythm - 145, 16 0 Rhythmic - 170 Rich - 12th June 230 272, 381, 437 Rope - 352 20 5 Rose (s) - 10th Dec . Riches - 16th May ; 14th July 22, 41, 136, 161, 300, 337 Riddle - 13 8 594 Ride, to - 441 Rosebud - 301, 594 Rider - 8th March Roseflower - 358, 359 44 1 Roseplant - 302 Right(ly), aright - 24th May ; Rose syrup - 31st May 1st, 3rd Nov . B .o .S . Row, to - 227 84, 85, 89, 164, 210, 240, Ruination - 130 363, 441, 519, 567, 568, Rule - 289 U .S . 590, 62 1 Run, to - 69, 350 322 Aph . 321 24, 36, 71, 189, 194, 197, Phr . Rust - 31st Jan . 198, 204, 266, 36 2 Right, to - 168 Phr . Aph . Righteous - 223 Sabir - 235 Righteousness - 299 U .S . Sacrament - 349 Ring, to - 438 U .S . 28 7 Ripe - 19 7 Aph . Sacred - 30th Sept . Rise - 9th July B .o .S 401, 58 2 287, 298, 370 U .S . 31 3 Aph . 33 2 Sacredness - 199 Rise, to - 9th, 11th Jan . ; Sacrifice(s) - 53, 100, 101 , 26th Febr . ; 15th, 27th May ; 303, 330, 447, 540, 577 9th June ; 18th, 31st Oct . ; 193, 264, 314, 352 16th, 21st Nov . ; 1st, 26th, B .o .S . Sacrifice, to - 7th Febr . ; 27th Dec . 2nd Oct . 4, 54, 93, 138, 230, 253, 53, 338a 269, 285, 297, 299, 306, 35 2 337, 368, 483, 514, 533, Sad - 38 1 538, 553, 556, 562, 591, 64 2 U .S . Sadness - 195, 220, 232, 286 Safe - 39, 51 4 23, 53, 73, 87, 197, 246, Safe(ly) - 12th April ; 10th 264, 301, 303, 305, 338, Aph . Jun e 34 5 147, 165, 250, 345 Phr . 212, 259 Risk, to - 381 U .S . Safety - 352 U .S . Sage - 24th May Rissalat - 55 Rivalry - 71 U .S . 137, 191, 327 River(s) - 30 8 U .S . 174, 204 104, 16 3 Aoh . Sail, to - 22 7 Road - 85, 479, 505 U .S . Saint(s) - 27th Febr . 316
B .O .S . U .S . Aph . Aph . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S .
Aph . U .S .
B .O .S . , U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S .
B .O .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . Aph . Phr .
B .O .S .
Phr . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Aph . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . Phr . U .S . B .O .S .
U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S .
31 7
(cont . Saint(s) ) U .S . 40, 76, 91, 119 , 563 204 Aph . Saintliness - 418, 443, 620 U .S . Saintly - 137 U .S . 77 Aph . Sake - 14th Sept . ; 21st Oct . B .o .S . 127, 435 U .S . Salat 103 U .S . Salt 339 U .S . Salvation - 30th June B .o .S . Same - 21st Jan . ; 9th, 15t h Febr . ; 8th March ; 7th May ; B .O .S . 29th June ; 2nd Aug . 195, 288, 304 , 362, 381 , 383, 567, 602, 634 U .S . 2, 6, 104, 107 , 160, 200 , 234, 301, 307 Aph . Sanga th a 594 U .S . B .O .S . Sanscrit - 16th Dec . Saki, Saqi - 230 U .S . Satan - 102 , 119, 396, 397 , 463 U .S . Satisfaction - 1st July B .o .S . 205, 329 U .S . 21, 23, 53 , 109, 257, 265 , 346 Aah . Satisfy, to - 22nd Febr . ; 19th B .O .S . July 329, 375 U .S . 21, 264 , 268, 346 Aph . Saum 103 U .S . Save 453 U .S . B .O .S . Save, to - 31st Aug . 111, 633 U .S . 352 Aph . Saviour - 453 U .S . Saw, to - 373 U .S . Say, to - 15th , 19th Febr . ; 6th, 15th March ; 24th May ; 28th June ; 5th Oct . ; 13th B .o .S . Nov . ; 20th, 27th Dec . 22, 40 , 97, 137, 191, 295 , 296, 359, 384 , 393, 455, 467, 528, 538 , 555, 606 , 626, 640 U .S . 96, 103, 141 , 144, 179, 181, 271, 338 Aph . Phr . 141 Scarcely - 30th July B .o .S . Scatter, to - 213 Phr . Sceptical - 275 U .S . Scheme - 92 , 262 Aph . School - 139, 419 U .S . B .O .S . Science - 17th Oct . 224, 480 U .S . U .S . Scientific - 600 Scientist 480 U .S . Scone - 1st July ; 26th Dec . B .o .S .
(cont . Scope ) 95, 280 Aph . Scornful - 469 U .S . Scorpion - 436 U .S . Scratch, to - 67 U .S . Scripture - 5th Oct . B .o .S . 113 Aph . Sea(s) - 17th, 19th April ; 21st Nov . ; 6th, 16th, 27t h Dec . B .O .S . 24, 77, 138, 227, 289, 30 4 308 U .S . 104 Aph . Sea-green - 304 U .S . Search - 25th June B .o .S . 4, 309 U .S . 163 Aph . B .O .S . Search, to - 16th Febr . 396, 454 U .S . Searchlight(s) - 454 U .S . Season 239 U .S . Seat 47 Aph . Second - 372, 497 U .S . 306 Aph . Secret(s) - 16th, 20th April ; 4th June ; 11th Oct . ; 14t h Dec . B .O .S . 115, 516, 537, 586 U .S . 27, 43, 148, 329 Aph . 143 Phr . Sect(s) - 27th July B .O .S . Secure 7 U .S . 264, 360, 361 Phr . See, to - 5th, 29th Jan . ; 6th Febr . ; 6th, 11th, 20th March ; 6th April ; 12th June ; 2nd July ; 14th, 24th Aug . ; 27th Sept . ; 16t h Oct . B .o .S . 35a, 62, 65, 83, 88, 91 , 106, 124a, 143, 167, 183, 192, 227, 250, 313, 318, 381, 434, 449, 451, 453, 454, 463, 492, 498, 516, 541, 581, 583, 616, 621, 623, 630, 643, 649, 654 , 657 U .S . 19, 40, 54, 129, 141, 142, 212, 234, 264, 266, 306 , 328 - 332, 346 Aph . 144, 150, 160, 164, 174 , 187, 282, 284, 323, 325 , 330 Phr . Seed(s) - 21st Febr . ; 29t h Oct . B .O .S . 299, 430 U .S . 54 Aph . Seek, to - 9th April ; 24th , 25th, 30th June ; 10th, 12th 317
318 (cont . Seek, to) Oct . B .o .S . (cont . Self) 347 Aph . 239, 258, 262, 295, 334, 87, 201, 206, 220, 227 , 484, 492, 496, 602, 626, 230, 262, 287, 296, 363 Phr . 627, 649 U .S . Self-confidence - 22nd Dec . B .o .S . 19, 27, 68, 69, 235, 243, 554 U .S . 305 Aph . Self-consciousness - 647 U .S . 155, 221, 320, 336 Phr . Self-control - 30th June ; Seeker(s) - 19th Dec . B .o .S . 24th Dec . B .o .S . 135, 266 U .S . Self-denial - 25th Oct . ; 27, 290, 327 Aph . 8th Nov . B .o .S . Seeking - 258 U .S . 349, 418 U .S . Seem, to - 3rd Sept . ; 27th 87, 165 Aph . Dec . B .o .S . Self-expression - 634 U .S . 141, 202, 255, 347, 446, Selfinterest - 25 U .S . 507, 553 U .S . Selfish - 31st May B .o .S . 24, 66, 69, 84, 92, 231, 116 U .S . 238 Aph . Selfishness - 8th, 13t h Seeming - 19th July ; 9th Dec . B .o .S . June B .o .S . 452 U .S . Selfless - 3rd Nov . B .o .S . 78 Aph . Selflessness - 1st, 3rd Nov . B .o .S . Seer 310 U .S . 504 U .S . 204 Aph . Self-mastered - 77 U .S . Seership - 533 U .S . Self-observation - 30th June B .o .S . Seldom 13 U .S . Selfpity - 29th Jan . ; 2n d Self - 9th, 11th, 15th Jan . ; Sept . B .O .S . 25th Febr . ; 9th, 12th, 13th, 96, 342 Aph . 15th, 17th, 19th, 22nd, Self-realization - 30th June B .o .S . 30th, 31st March ; 3rd, 7th, 491, 634 U .S . 14th, 21st April ; 2nd, 9th, 166, 292 Aph . 13th, 14th, 21st, 27th, Self-realized - 445 U .S . 28th May ; 23rd, 24th, 30th Sell, to - 433, 605 U .S . June ; 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 14th, Seller - 433 U .S . 17th, 28th July ; 4th, 19th, Send, to - 98, 155, 289, 452 , 23rd Aug . ; 27th Sept . ; 5th, 654 U .S . 13th, 15th, 24th, 25th, 233, 369 Phr . 26th, 29th, 30th Oct . ; 1st, Sense(s) - 15th June B .o .S . 5th, 16th, 21st, 24th, 28th 105, 188, 279, 501•, 584 U .S . Nov . ; 2nd, 11th, 20th, 23, 43, 44, 62, 64, 173 , 21st, 25th Dec . B .o .S . 324 Aph . 39, 41, 51, 62, 65, 72, 88, Sense, to - 27 Aph . 94, 104, 105, 124, 125, 130, Sensible - 351 Aph . 138, 152, 165, 171, 232, Sensitive - 521 U .S . 242, 247, 255, 256, 259, Sentiment(s) - 253, 314, 481 U .S . 269, 271, 287, 288, 311 - Separate, to - 13th May ; 1s t 313, 320, 334, 371, 372, June ; 5th July ; 23rd Oct . B .o .S . 374, 375, 381, 383, 416, 56, 492, 530 U .S . 424, 425, 432, 441, 444, Separateness - 27th Sept . ; 445, 453, 466, 490 - 492a, 3rd Nov . B .o .S . 500, 503, 509, 513, 529, Separation - 3rd Nov . B .o .S . 536, 539, 541, 543, 564, Series - 5th Aug . B .o .S . 582, 588, 593, 599, 616, Serious(ly) - 47, 78, 478 U .S . 624, 633, 634, 638, 639, Servant(s) - 381 U .S . 645, 647, 657, 658, 660 U .S . 115 Aph . 36, 54, 57, 100, 114, 127, Serve, to - 16th Oct . B .o .S . 140, 141, 152, 172, 178, 127, 218, 374, 554, 555 U .S . 194, 198, 203, 212, 214, 95, 164, 219, 256 Aph . 216, 226, 228, 229, 232, 30, 38, 94, 96 - 116, 11 8 234, 251, 259, 268, 275, - 121, 123 -134, 136, 247 , 279, 285, 294, 300, 306, 338 Phr . 318, 327, 335, 341 - 343, Service - 20th June ; 21s t 318
31 9 (cont . Service) Oct . 127, 315, 330, 477
B .o .S . U .S .
95
Aph .
67, 137, 148, 149 Set, to - 94 Seven - 330 Several - 88 Severely - 186 Sex - 129, 206, 399 - 403 Shade - 3rd Dec . Shadow(s) - 4th Jan . ; 2nd June ; 6th Aug . ; 23rd Sept . 316, 338 79, 110, 125, 350 Shafi - 334, 355, 356 Shake, to - 181 Shakespeare - 634 Shame - 409 62, 64 Share - 28th Sept . 299 Share, to - 28th Dec . 137, 191 48 Sharp - 27th June 64 Shell(s) - 28th Jan . ; 14t h Nov . 404, 621, 624 Shine, to - 10th Dec . 4, 230, 654 17, 142, 215, 307 262 Shoot, to - 650 Shore - 227 Short - 19th July Shortcoming(s) - 208 Shoulder - 10 Show, to - 29th Dec . 84, 85, 98, 160, 215, 217 , 251, 255, 282, 386, 408 , 438, 614, 646 8, 65, 67, 111, 204, 274 , 276 75, 167 Shower - 349 Shrine - 20th Jan . ; 6th March 16th July 415, 492, 516, 520, 585
308
Phr . Aph . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Phr . B .o .S . Aph . B .O .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . U .S . B .O .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S .
U .S . Aph . Phr . Aph . ; B .O .S . U .S .
Phr .
Aph . Shrink, to - 269 U .S . Shrivel, to - 617 U .S . Shut, to - 500 Aph . 318, 320 Aoh . Sickness - 158 Side ( s) - 10, 88 - 90, 106, 239, 259 , 317, 318, 473 , 502, 614 U .S . 240 Apk . 27, 29 , 42, 176, 177 Phr .
U .S . Sigh, to - 19 Sight - 23rd March ; 8th May ; B .O .S . 31st Oct . U .S . 295, 338, 387, 449
55
Aph .
Phr . 290, 328 Sign - 27th Febr . ; 24t h B .o .S . Marc h ; 22nd Sept . 38, 47, 105, 117, 267, 438, 500 U .S . 15, 26, 45, 77, 111, 183 , 227 Aph . Significance - 372, 549 U .S . Signify, to - 251, 304, 530 U .S . Silence - 29th April B .o .S . 107, 108, 327, 370, 438 , 577, 628, 631 U .S . 142 Phr . Silent(ly) - 17th April ; 18th Dec . B .o .S . 381 U .S . 42 Aph . Simple - 11th Aug . ; 19th Dec . B .o .S . 137 U .S . Simplicity - 27th Febr . B .o .S . 142, 491 U .S . Sin(s) - 2nd Febr . ; 18t h March B .o .S . 26, 33, 51, 211, 319, 320 , 385, 585, 601 U .S . 73, 206, 209, 210, 322 , 349 Aph . Sin, to - 364 U .S . Since - 263, 295 U .S . Sincere - 19th March ; 11th B .o .S . April ; 3rd Nov . 191, 196, 554 U .S . 179, 300 Aph . Sincerity - 28th Jan . ; 19th , B .o .S . 24th June ; 30th Nov . 141, 404 U .S . 179 Aph . Sinful 320 U .S . Sing, to - 7th May B .o .S . 323, 350 U .S . 108, 274 Aph . Singer(s) - 323, 381 U .S . Single - 16th Oct . ; 4th Dec . B .O .S . 240 U .S . 338 Aph . Singlemindedness - 18th Jan . B .o .S . Sinner - 22nd July B .o .S . 320, 364, 482 U .S . Sit, to - 36, 223 AphSituation(s) - 36, 225, 321 , 322, 426, 528 U .S . 350 Aph . 209, 217 Phr . Sky - 6th March ; 31st Oct . B .o .S . 319
32 0 Slave - 28th Febr . B .o .S . 483 U .S . 59 Aph . Sleep - 25th April ; 20th July B .o .S . 421, 468 U .S . 64 Phr . Sleep, to - 27th June B .o .S . 57, 373, 650 U .S . Slight - 28th April B .o .S . 17, 504 U .S . Small - 14th April ; 15th May ; 49th, 21st, 30th Aug . ; 28t h Nov . B .o .S . 17, 201, 285, 446, 449, 454 , 503, 514, 585, 624 U .S . 158, 287 Aph . Smile - 411, 452 U .S . 77, 197 Aoh . Smile, to - 19, 24, 35, 137 , 467 U .S . Smoke - 26th Aug . B .o .S . Smooth - 44, 169 Phr . Snake - 436 U .S . Soar, to - 328 U .S . Social - 224 U .S . Soft - 301 Aph . Softness - 461 U .S . Soil - 28th Jan . B .o .S . 404 U .S . Sole (sb .) - 45 U .S . Sole (aj .) - 24th April B .o .S . Solid - 22nd Nov . B .o .S . Solitude - 8th Dec . B .o .S . 396 U .S . 223 Aph . Solution - 37 U .S . 53, 346 Aph . Solve, to - 21, 138 U .S . Some - 116, 119, 274, 281 , 321, 344, 423, 454, 557 , 630 U .S . Somebody - 287 U .S . Someone - 62, 164, 173, 193 , 484 U .S . 19 Aph . Something - 2nd Oct . ; 12th , 20th Dec . B .o .S . 48, 201, 275, 287, 319, 477 , 570, 648 U .S . 79, 128, 203, 228, 281, 335 Aph . Sometimes - 88, 624 U .S . 147, 214, 231, 312 Aph . Somewhere - 30th June B .o .S . 287 U .S . Song(s) - 7th May B .o .S . 114, 323, 381 U .S . Soon - 17, 227, 237, 368, 528 , 567 U .S . 3'20
(cont . Soon )
60, 71, 316 Aph . Sorrow(s) - 6th June ; 1s t Sept . ; 3rd Dec . B .o .S . 324 U .S . 101, 293, 294 Aph . Sorrow, to - 9th July B .o .S . Sorrowful - 137, 317 U .S . Sorry - 5th Nov . B .o .S . Soul(s) - 26th, 27 :h, 31s t Jan . ; 16th, 20th, 22nd Febr . ; 3rd, 21st, 31st March ; 1st, 8th, 21st, 29th April ; 1st, 3rd, 9th, 15th, 16th, 21st, 25th June ; 7th, 18th, 19th, 31st July ; 5th, 16th, 21st, 27th - 29th Aug . ; 8th, 9th Sept . ; 1st, 3rd, 6th, 10th, 12th, 20th Oct . ; 6th, 9th, 18th, 20t h Nov . ; 9th, 10th, 30th Dec . B .o .S . 31, 38, 50, 56, 86, 92 , 114, 137, 161, 169, 227, 233, 235, 240, 258, 276, 305, 317, 325 - 328, 334, 336, 341, 350, 354, 386, 433, 479, 481, 496, 497, 502, 520, 523, 532, 539, 544, 545, 552, 563, 569, 580, 581, 590, 632, 642 , 657 U .S . 1, 12, 15, 17, 19 - 21, 24, 25, 31, 32, 41, 44 - 46 , 50, 51, 56, 61, 67, 69, 70, 75, 77, 79 - 82, 85, 89, 95, 102, 108, 111, 112, 116, 121, 122, 131 ; 133, 134, 136 - 138, 148, 154 158, 161, 163, 166, 167, 170, 173, 175, 177, 195, 197, 199, 200, 203, 207, 209 - 211, 222, 225, 229, 234 - 236, 241, 245, 248, 249, 251, 255, 261, 264, 265, 269, 271, 273, 279, 291, 298, 301, 303, 307, 309, 311, 317, 321, 323, 327 - 329, 335, 340, 343 , 344, 349, 350 Aph . 5, 6, 12, 20, 22, 23, 25 , 31, 35, 45, 61, 63, 67, 68, 81, 86 , 91, 102, 104, 138, 145, 146, 162, 180, 181, 192, 197, 199, 216, 235, 244, 279, 285, 287, 291, 292, 295, 297 - 299, 301 304, 310 - 312, 315, 317 333, 341, 343, 351, 355, 356, 359, 369
32 1 Sound (sb .) - 438, 589, 631 U .S . Sound (ad .) - 27th June B .o .S . 305, 350 Phr . Sound, to - 195 U .S . B .o .S . Sour - 19th Febr . 339 U .S . Source(s) - 29th Jan . ; 12th March ; 24th Aug . ; 5th, 23rd Sept . ; 24th Oct . B .o .S . 166, 262, 335, 452, 523 , 642 U .S . 137, 211, 249, 285, 307 , 323, 326, 350 Aph . Sovereignty - 4th April B .o .S . Sow, to - 15th, 21st Febr . ; 29th Oct . B .o .S . 87, 430 U .S . 54 Aph . Sowing - 29th Oct . B .o .S . Space - 1st Jan . ; 23rd July B .o .S . 4, 338 U .S . 160, 161, 246 Aph . 289 Phr . Spare, to - 4th Dec . B .o .S . 608 U .S . Spark - 90, 139 Aph . B .o .S . Sparkle, to - 8th Oct . Speak, to - 6th, 26th Jan . ;
1st, 18th March ; 5th April ; 13th Nov . B .O .S . 40, 47, 75, 81, 111, 112 , 359, 381, 384, 416, 486 , 583 U .S . 43, 104, 150, 302 Aph . Special(ly) - 26th April B .o .S . 338a, 376, 383, 635 U .S . 170 Aph . Soeck(s) 4 U .S . Speech - 8th May ; 8th Sept . ; 13th Nov . B .o .S . 137, 327 U .S . 207 Phr . Soeed(s) - 400 U .S . Spell 263 U .S . B .o .S . Spend, to - 31st Aug . Sphere(s) - 23rd, 29th June ; 23rd July B .o .S . 237, 500, 580 U .S . 19, 31, 85, 152, 157, 158 , 161, 249, 318, 321 Aoh . 324 Phr . Spider - 39, 296 Aoh . Spirit(s) - 19th, 28th Jan . ; 2nd, 8th April ; 9th, 21st May ; 25th, 28th July ; 20th Oct . ; 15th Dec . B .o .S, 55, 64, 183, 192, 229, 276 , 279, 325, 328, 329, 336, 404, 474, 485, 499, 531,
(cont . Spirit(s)) 532, 538, 561, 562, 565, 569, 597 U .S . 1, 12, 31, 50, 67, 154 , 168, 272, 323 Aph . 82, 83, 183 - 185, 196 , 199, 210, 212, 247, 307 , 332, 351 Phr . Spiritual(ly) - 4th Febr . ; 20th, 30th April ; 21st May ; 17th June ; 8th Aug . ; 14th Sept . B .O .S . 103, 132, 214, 224, 237 , 255, 279, 386, 490, 500, 502, 504, 524, 532, 536, 569, 571 . 600 - 602, 625 , 660 U .S . 24, 26, 42, 48, 91, 98 , 109, 117, 157, 163, 181, 182, 187, 194, 209, 213, 247, 248, 261, 271, 278 , 303, 306, 315, 318, 334 Aph . 87, 226 Phr . Spiritualism - 11th May B .o .S . Spirituality - 12th, 27th B .o .S . Febr . ; 22nd Sept . 117, 549 U .S . 99, 180, 181, 195, 256 Aoh . Spite - 464, 486, 601 U .S . 132 Aoh . Spoil, to - 281 U .S . 76, 147 Aph . Soot 319 Aph . Spread, to - 14th Febr . ; 23rd July ; 9th Sept . ; 13th Oct . B .o .S . 64, 179, 381, 408 U .S . 67 Aph . 83, 135, 136, 138, 253 Phr . B .O .S . Sorin a_ - 16th Nov . 345 Phr . Spring, to - 652 U .S . 96, 350 Aph . Staff 554 U .S . Stage - 16th March ; 7th Oct . B .o .S . 46, 109, 140, 237, 324 , 329 Aph . Stagnation - 485 U .S . Stain 349 Aph . Staircase - 330, 618 U .S . 173 Aph . Stand, to - 4th Jan . ; 30t h B .o .S . Sept . ; 1st, 7th Nov . 10, 54, 134, 137, 173, 191 , 289, 356, 473, 504, 514 , 542, 616, 657 U .S . 5, 22, 73, 126, 231 Aph . Standard - 16th Jan . ; 8t h July B .o .S . 54, 374 U .S . 324 Aph .
321
32 2 Standpoint - 8th July
B .o .S .
(cont . Strength )
Standstill - 351
Aph .
Star(s) - 4, 287, 408 177, 201
U .S . Aph .
126, 169, 188, 258 211, 250, 354, 355
Start, to - 27th March ; 30t h Oct .
B .o .S .
251
Aph .
State - 11th Febr . ; 10th March B .o .S . 609 U .S . 271 Aph . Station - 576 U .S . Stay, to - 6th March B .o .S . 151, 558, 622 U .S . Steadily - 272, 290 Phr . Steel - 4th Oct . B .o .S . 351, 381 U .S . Steer, to - 128, 227 U .S . Stem - 298 Aph . Step ( s) - 16th March ; 12t h Sept . B .o .S . 330, 338a, 418, 504, 618 U .S . 33, 58, 153, 352 Aph . Step, to - 177 U .S . Stepping- stone - 550 U .S . 348 Aph .
Still - 8th May ; 10th Oct . B .o .S . 58, 173, 231, 250, 279, 346 , 378, 477, 521 , 553, 587 U .S . 244, 298, 333 Aph . 151 - 154, 290, 295, 296 ,
298 Still, to - 10th Nov . Stillness - 487 40, 109, 234 Sting - 145 Stock - 338a Stone(s) - 27th June 389, 581, 586 Stoop, to - 192 Stop, to - 16th Dec . Store - 23rd Jan . 338a Store, to - 27th Jan . ; 6t h Febr . Storm - 227 Straight - 19th June 479 213 Strain - 222 Straits - 36 Strange - 79 Stranger(s) - 19th May 383, 530 Stream(s) - 1st Jan . ; 15th April ; 30th Seot . 73, 104, 338, 350 Strength - 30th Sept . 77, 331, 514, 554, 599
322
Phr . B .o .S . U .S . Ach . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S .
Aoh . Phr .
Strengthen, to - 21st Jan . ; 13th Sept . 65, 120 16, 21, 26, 97, 103, 107 , 125, 135, 136, 2C0, 209 , 218, 240, 249, 251, 252 , 272, 302, 304 Stretch, to - 27th Dec . 4, 200 Strife - 250 Strike, to - 27th June 342, 381, 451, 534, 554 25, 213, 302 String(s) - 451
Aph . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S .
Strive, to - 628, 635
U .S .
235, 313 Strong(ly) - 97, 381, 646 99, 217 241 Strongminded - 332 Struggle - 443, 488
Ach . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . U .S .
B .o .S . U .S .
Phr .
B .O .S .
188, 189
Aph .
21, 252
Phr .
Struggle, to - 443, 483, 620 U .S . 164 Student(s) - 144, 160, 637
Phr . U .S .
Study(ies) - 21st July 333, 516, 578 Study, to - 7th Febr .
B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S .
531 53, 346 Stumble, to - 10th June Stupid - 472 Stupidity - 27 Subject - 30th June
U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S .
337 Sublime - 16th Oct . 46 91 Sublimity - 16th Oct . Submit, to - 4th Dec . 303 Substance - 2, 232 Substantial - 275 Subtle - 35a, 138, 317, 578 Subtlety - 186 Succeed, to - 23rd Febr . 5 Success - 23rd Jan . ; 18t h April ; 12th Nov . ; 20th Dec . 35, 334, 425, 442, 489 , 546, 577 99, 146, 194, 351 245, 246, 263 - 266, 268 , 269
Aph . B .o .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S .
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr .
32 3 Successful - 386
170
U .S .
Phr .
Surround, to - 230, 452
54
U .S .
Aph .
U .S . Aph . U .S .
57, 184, 246 Surrounding(s) - 221, 374 , 586
Phr .
Aph .
Suspicion(s) - 381
U .S .
Sufficient(ly) - 30th March 61 188 160, 355 Suffocate, to - 31st July Sufi - 128, 138, 186, 267, 335, 336, 374, 490, 491, 540, 627, 628 58 67, 124, 128 Sufi characteristics - 491
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S .
U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S .
Sustain, to - 362 Sustainer - 453 Sustenance - 241 Sweep, to - 10 73 Sweet - 31st May 36, 87, 237, 308, 339 Sweeten, to - 107 Swim, to - 16th Dec . Swing - 20th July Swing, to - 305
U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . U .S .
Sufi-Message - 124
Phr .
Switch - 342
U .S .
Sufi motto - 74 Sufi Order - 74 Sufism - 73, 125, 500, 578, 649 58 Suit, to - 25th May 99, 424
U .S . U .S .
Sword(s) - 49, 559 Symbol(s) - 408 107 Symbolically - 287 Symbology - 462, 594 Sympathise, to - 20th July 191, 317, 425, 539
U .S . U .S . Aph . Aph . U .S .
Suitable - 17th Dec .
B .o .S .
Summit - 163 Sum-total - 92
Aph . Aph .
Such - 381, 504 351 Suffer, to - 137, 459
130, 311
U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S .
March ; 8th April ; 29th June ; B .o .S . 31st Oct .
4, 179, 238, 281, 287, 337, U .S . 338, 368, 623, 654
161, 282, 283, 330 Supernatural - 381 Supply, to - 50 Support - 24th Aug . 330, 442, 477 Support, to - 477 Suppose, to - 373, 616 Supreme - 453 Sure - 477 264 Surely - 29th April 227, 454 Surface - 17th April 90, 338, 507 35 Surmount, to - 37, 131 214, 215 Surrender, to - 22nd, 23rd Jan . 383
Sympathy - 2nd, 4th April ; 15th July ; 22nd Aug .
B .O .S . B .o .S . U .S .
B .O .S . U .S .
Aph . B .o .S .
198, 230, 425, 521, 528 ,
Sun - 4th Jan . ; 4th, 23rd
12, 50, 51, 66, 215, 229, 323 Sunblind - 310 Sunny - 594 Sunrise - 227, 306 Sunshine - 78
293
U .S .
Aph . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph .
572 56, 240
U .S . Aph .
Symphony - 80 299
U .S . Aph .
Synthesisation) - 330 Synthesize - 330 System - 338
U .S . U .S . U .S .
Table(s) - 457, 606
U .S .
Phr .
Tact - 188
U .S .
U .S . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . Phr . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Phr .
Tail - 436 Tailor - 25th July Take, to - 9th, 21st Febr . ; 1st, 21st May ; 1st June ; 4th, 9th, 16th, 17th July ; 18th Aug . ; 27th Dec . 36, 52, 56, 85, 119, 216 , 228, 266, 267, 274, 279 . 332, 338, 352, 357, 372 , 386, 414, 415, 477, 478 , 504, 540, 566, 580, 606 , 627, 647 221, 286, 343 75, 166 Talent - 7th July Talk, to - 350, 486, 531 , 576 Tank - 289 Target - 441
U .S .
B .o .S . U .S .
B .O .S .
B .o .S .
U .S . Aph .
Phr . B•o•S U .S . U .S . U .S . 323
32 4 Task - 4th, 7th July
B .o .S .
559 299 Taste - 86
U .S . Aph . Aph .
Tax - 28th Aug . Teach, to - 15th Jan . ; 13th
B .o .S .
July ; 5th Oct . 240, 312, 374, 408, 443 ,
March ; 11th May ; 29th Sept . B .o .S . 40, 160, 215, 340, 423, 424,
452, 481, 485, 500, 586 , 620, 631
449, 492, 500, 525, 532, 578, 598, 645 3, 87, 216, 275 75, 209 Teacher(s) - 22nd, 27th March ; 15th April ; 22nd July ; 14th, 19th, 20th
Sept . ; 30th Oct . 94, 214, 273, 340, 341, 515, 517, 525, 528, 551, 559, 575, 658 Teaching - 30th Sept . 449, 645 205, 344 Tear(s) - 17, 149, 155, 198, 337, 651 Tell, to - 161, 306, 358,
371, 372, 481, 588
U .S . Aph . Phr .
B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S .
(cont . There )
54, 56, 84, 2 .14, 286, 312 Therefore - 3rd March ; 22n d May ; 30th June ; 3rd, 26t h
Aph . B .o .S .
U .S .
127, 128, 176, 203, 302 Aph . Thickly - 229 Aph . Thine - 230 U .S . Thing(s) - 10th, 17th Febr . ; 3rd, 20th March ; 9th April ; 1st, 7th, 15th, 23rd, 24th May ; 9th, 22nd, 30th June ;
29th July ; 13th, 20th, 27t h Sept . ; 10th Oct . ; 8th Nov . ; 19th, 29th Dec . B .o .S . 68a, 109, 137, 240, 254 , 285, 291, 304, 317, 334 , 335, 342 - 351, 377, 382 , 413, 416, 426, 453, 455 , 474, 477, 478, 488, 492 , 493, 512, 524, 533, 540 , 544, 549, 554, 581, 582 ,
U .S .
586, 596, 601, 629, 634 ,
Temper, to - 130 Temperament - 25th May ; 23rd Dec . Temple(s) - 185, 438 308, 309 Temporary - 520
U .S .
Tempt, to - 11th Febr .
648 U .S . 86, 92, 103, 130, 147, 149 , 155, 189, 190, 244, 262 , 269, 275, 278, 287, 312 , 333, 336 Aph . 27 - 29, 64, 187, 198, 320 Phr .
B .o .S .
Think, to - 15th, 25th Jan . ;
Ten - 24th Sept . Tendency(ies) - 267,275, 595 306 Tender - 137 319 Tenderhearted - 482 Tenderness - 15th July 199 Term(s) - 209 Terminate, to - 94 Test(s) - 181, 646 314 Test, to - 301 Thank, to - 622 Thankful - 46 Thanks - 20th June 178 Thanksgiving - 268, 273 Theatrical - 224 Theme - 485 205 Then - 9th April ; 11th Dec . 554, 599 44, 211, 288 Theosophy - 627 There - 29th May
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S . Aph . Aph . U .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . B .o .S .
19th Febr . ; 14th April ; 3r d Aug . ; 31st Dec . B .O .S . 54, 122, 182, 193, 270 , 287, 296, 355, 371 ; 441 , 443, 469, 477, 503, 511 , 605, 613, 616, 620 U .S . 150 Aph . Thinker - 16th April B .o .S . 419 U .S . Thinking - 468 U .S . Third - 372, 416 U .S . Thirst - 22nd Febr . B .o .S . Thirst, to - 12th May B .o .S . Thorn(s) - 17th July ; 10th Dec . B .o .S . 41, 301, 302, 541 U .S . Thorny - 136, 381 U .S . Thoroughly - 449 U .S . Though - 264, 376, 387 U .S . Thought(s) - 17th Jan . ; 5th , 10th May ; 2nd, 11th, 14t h June ; 23rd Aug . ; 8th Sept . ; 23rd Oct . ; 11th, 14th, 30t h Nov . B .o .S . 173, 181, 260, 334, 352 , 374, 430, 463, 468, 503 ,
324
B .o .S . U .S . Phr . U .S .
32 5 (cont . Thought(s)) 511, 512, 579, 583, 585, 647, 651 U .S . 38, 74, 148, 164, 352 Aph . 207, 290, 296, 334 Phr . Thoughtful - 137 U .S . 88 Phr . Thoughtless - 419 U .S . Thousand(s) - 7th Sept . ; 7th Nov . B .O .S . 168, 192, 353, 552, 604 , 605, 622 U .S . 276, 309, 351 Aph . 58, 65 Phr . Three - 16th April B .o .S . 349, 372, 443, 620, 658 U .S . Thrice 364 U .S . Thrill, to - 368 U .S . Thriving - 178 U .S . Throne 153 U .S . 36, 47 Aph . Through(out) - 26th Jan . ; 7th, 11th, 14th Febr . ; 8th, 25th June ; 7th July ; 24th Aug . ; 7th, 24th Nov . ; 10th Dec . B .o .S . 35a, 70, 72, 91, 98, 179 , 191, 209, 219, 227, 253, 279, 283, 300, 368, 381, 451, 579, 580, 591, 619 , 639, 646 U .S . 127, 133, 157, 197, 203 , 212, 226, 234, 237, 264, 278, 291, 300, 314, 327 , 349 Aph . 1, 28, 43, 62, 71, 129, 224, 251, 289, 317, 321, 337 , 349 Phr . Throw, to - 21st Febr . ; 4th March B .o .S . 39, 366, 586 U .S . 132 Aph . 161, 196, 281, 283 Phr . Thus - 195, 338a, 506, 527 , 608 U .S . Tickle, to - 227 Aph . Tickling - 227 Aph . Tiding(s) - 93, 305, 368 U .S . Tie 206 U .S . Tie, to 8 U .S . Till - see Until . Time(s) - 1st, 21st Jan . ; 23rd Febr . ; 8th March ; 24t h B .o .S . Sept . ; 7th Nov . 17, 34, 54, 55, 62, 77, 166 , 168, 216, 282, 290, 338, 338a, 352, 381, 385, 386, 452, 494, 495, 608, 625 , 631, 653 U .S . 66, 90, 97, 104, 134, 148,
(cont . Time(s)) 161, 182 , 190, 194, 246, 258, 301 Aph . 56, 58, 65 Phr . Tiredness - 648 U .S . Tissue 651 U .S . To-day - 11th July B .O .S . 54, 513, 554 U .S . 264 Aph . Together - 29th June ; 13th Sept . ; 3rd Nov . B .o .S . 54, 338a, 387 U .S . 36, 92 Aph . Tolerance - 18th Febr . ; 24th March ; 25th May ; 5th June ; 11th Sept . B .o .S . 217 U .S . 111 Aph . Tolerant - 8th Jan . B .o .S . B .o .S . Tolerate, to - 16th Oct . 554 U .S . 130 Aph . 69 Phr . To-morrow - 250 Aph . Tone - 494, 495 U .S . 160 Aph . Tongue - 49, 436, 475, 502 U .S . Tool(s) - 208, 451 U .S . 203 Aph . Tooth, teeth - 436 U .S . Top 6 Aph . Torch - 18th June B .o .S . 386, 449 U .S . Torment, to - 452 U .S . Torture - 62, 452 U .S . Torture, to - 452 U .S . 228 Aph . Total(ly) - 96 Aph . Touch 154 Aph . 334, 337, 338 Phr . Touch, to - 16th July B .o .S . 89, 90, 130, 241, 297, 415 , 581, 642 U .S . 4, 10, 227, 245, 249, 298 , 335 Aph . Toward(s) - 8th Febr . ; 24th March ; 8th April ; 15t h July ; 12th, 18th Sept . ; B .o .S . 10th Nov . ; 22nd Dec . 227, 275, 276, 281, 443 , 501, 518, 608, 620 U .S . 205, 243, 253', 348, 352 Aph . 71, 156, 202, 278, 316 , 318 Phr . Tract - 23rd June B .o .S . Trader 239 U .S . Tradition - 34 U .S . B .O .S . Tragedy(ies) - 1st Aug . 647 U .S .
325
326
(cont . Tragedy(ies) ) 90 Aph . Train, to - 195 U .S . Tranquil - 260 U .S . 5, 86 Phr . Transient - 29th Dec . B .o .S . Transitoriness - 350 Aph . Transitory - 29th Dec . B .o .S . Trap 201 U .S . Travel, to - 12th April ; 25th .o .S . May 297 B Aoh . Traveller - 231 Aph . Treachery - 381 U .S . Tread, to - 156, 177, 355 , 366, 540, 556, 567 U .S . 213 Aph . 55, 132 Phr . Treasure(s) - 9th, 21st, 31s t Aug . B .o .S . 181, 255, 407, 496 U .S . Treat, to - 20th Jan . ; 19t h May B .o .S . Tree(s) - 14th Jan . ; 19t h Febr . ; 2nd March ; 10th Sept . ; 17th Nov . ; 18th , 21st Dec . B .o .S . 192, 299, 354, .408, 604 , 654 U .S . 40, 91, 109, 152, 163, 215 , 320 Aph . Tremble, to - 269 Aph . Trend 374 U .S . Trial(s) - 314 Aph . Trinity 658 U .S . Trouble(s) - 29th Jan . ; 1s t Aug . B .o .S . 228 U .S . 321, 330 Aph . 147 Phr . Trouble, to - 271 U .S . 191 Aph . True, truly - 350 Aoh . Trueness - 141 U .S . Trust - 24th Aug . ; 22nd Dec . B .o .S . 285, 450, 453, 542 U .S . 17, 214, 341 Aph . Trust, to - 227, 254, 334 U .S . 214, 312 Aph . Trustee - 637 U .S . Truth(s) - 1st, 3rd, 6th Jan . ; 23rd Febr . ; 9th, 12th, 14th, 24th, 25th, 29th March ; 10th, 29th April ; 2nd, 21st, 30th May ; 24th, 26th, 27th, 28th Oct . ; 1st, 3rd, 18t h Nov . ; 7th, 19th Dec . B .o .S . 76, 110, 172, 213 - 215 , 258, 309, 331, 334, 355 326
(cont . Truth(s)) 357, 365, 470, 481, 496, 554, 577 , 602, 640 U .S . 6, 33, 92, 103, 104, 107 , 121, 173, 176, 230, 243, 246, 266, 267, 304, 309 , 316, 322, 352 Aoh . 323 P h-r . Try, to - 9th, 27th March ; 11th July ; 16th Dec . B .o .$ . 41, 186, 201, 386, 395 , 424, 514, 548, 587, 622 U .S 27, 148, 187 Aph Tulip 360 U .S Tune, to - 324, 381 U .S
. . . .
27, 222 Aph . Turn 366 U .S . 166 Phr . Turn, to - 4th Jan . ; 20th March B .O .S . 17, 161, 172, 179, 225 , 237, 240, 423, 449, 452 U .S . 132, 260, 310, 316 Aph . 93 Phr . Turning - 342 U .S . Twice - 364, 583 U .S . Twinkle, to - 287 U .S . Twist 30 U .S . Two - 19th Febr . ; 30th May ; 5th June ; 29th Aug . ; 23r d Sept . B .o .S . 161, 206, 283, 458, 586 , 625, 630, 649, 658 U .S . 200 Aph . Type 128 U .S . Tyrannous - 62 U .S . Tyranny - 29, 399 U .S .
Ugliness - 622 U .S . 124 Aph . Ugly 391 U .S . Ultimate - 110 U .S . 246 Aph . Unalterable - 426 U .S . Unassuming - 117 Aph . Unattractive - 12th Oct . B .o .S . Unaware - 20th July B .o .S . 621, 625 U .S . Unbelievers - 18 Aph . Unbroken - 381 U .S . 56 Aph . Unchangeable - 426 U .S . Uncontrolled - 78, 579 U .S . Uncooked - 5th Febr . B .o .S . Uncovering - 361 U .S . Uncut 20 U .S . Under - 76, 322, 338 U .S . 178 Aph .
32 7 Underneath - 589 Understand, to - 7th Jan . ;
U .S .
6th, 13th April ; 20th , 25th, 30th May ; 29th July ; 6th Oct . ; 19th Dec . 83, 231, 349, 395, 434 , 449, 461, 462, 586, 630 , 649
B .o .S .
U .S .
Aph . 45, 130 Phr . 158, 164, 284 Understanding - 3rd July ; 1st , 8th Aug . ; 3rd, 15th Nov .
B .o .S .
217, 240, 538, 608 130
U .S . Aph .
Undesirable - 166, 493 121, 259
(cont . Universe) 30th June 27th Aug . 362, 446, 451, 532, 624 , 626 185, 292 Unknown - 292, 381, 502 Unlearn, to - 536 Unless - 1st, 3rd Nov . 102 141, 172, 193, 348
; B .O .S . U .S . Aph . U .S . U .S . B .O .S . U .S . Aph .
Unlimited - 12th April ; 3rd Sept . ; 28th Nov . ; 26t h
U .S . Phr .
Dec . 176 Unlit - 26th June Unlocked - 516
S .o .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S .
Undifferentiated - 565
U .S .
Unmatured - 350
U .S .
Undone - 126 Undoubtedly - 384 Unearthly - 285 Un-ending - 16th April ; 16th Dec . Unevolved - 54
U .S . U .S . U .S .
Unnatural - 489 Unnecessarily - 366 Unnoticed - 555 Unravel, to - 8 Unreal - 294 Unrest - 363
U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S .
Unfailing - 22nd Sept . Unflavoured - 30
B .o .S . U .S .
Unfold, to - 11th Jan . ; 13th March 233
B .o .S . U .S .
286 Unseasoned - 30 Unseen - 16th July 295, 415, 555
Aph . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
Unselfish - 116 Unselfishness - 26th Aug . Unshakable - 554 Unshaken - 381 Unsheathed - 559
U .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . U .S .
Unsteadiness - 156 Unsuccessful - 20th Dec .
U .S . B .o .S .
B .o .S . U .S .
5, 22, 23, 33, 68, 162, 316 , Phr . 324 - 330 U .S . Unfoldment - 336 Aph . 15, 205 B .O .S . Unforgiving - 6th March Aph . Unfulfilled - 135 Unhappiness - 29th Jan . ; 14t h June ; 23rd Aug . ; 11th Nov . B .o .S . U .S . 519, 568
Unhappy - 26th Dec . 203
B .o .S . Aph .
Unimaginable - 381
U .S .
Uninjured - 514 Uninteresting - 3rd Jan . 29 Unintimate - 2nd May
U .S . B .o .S . Aph . B .o .S .
Union - 634
U .S .
Unite, to - 24th April ; 5th June ; 21st Oct . 107, 139, 276, 593 306 257, 367 Unity - 7th, 9th Febr . ; 24th
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr .
April ; 6th May ; 11th, 16th Oct . 608, 627 305 Universal - 23rd July 125 Universe - 14th, 15th Febr . ;
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S . U .S .
U .S . Unthankful - 621 Until - 29th, 30th Jan . ; 15th, 28th March ; 21st May ; 13th, 27th June ; 5th Aug . ; B .o .S . 16th Oct . ; 2nd, 7th Nov .
262, 338a, 540, 563, 564
U .S .
109, 201, 218, 250 Untrue - 241 Unveil, to - 144, 307 Unveiling (sb .) - 155 Unwilling - 267
Aph . U .S . Aph . Aph . U .S .
Unworldly - 98
Aph .
Unworthy - 334-, 545 Up - 623
U .S . U .S .
324 Uphold, to - 569 Uproot, to - 7th March Upside down - 14th Dec . Upward(s) - 27th Dec . 623 Urge, to - 645 Use - 19th Febr . ; 31st May ; 23rd Oct . 330, 533, 592
Aph . U .S . B .o .S . B .o .S . B .o .S . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
327
32 8 Use, to - 3rd, 7th May ; 31st Aug . 195, 299, 456, 512, 584 119, 149, 18 8 117 Useful - 394 Usual(ly) - 30th May 53 0 Utmost - 1st April ; 18th May 89 Utter, to - 31st March ; 29th Apri l
B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . Aph . B .o . S
Vain - 24th Sept . B .o .S . 34 9 U .S . 275 Aph . Vairagia - 522 U .S . Value - 9th Apri l B .o .S . 34, 275, 527, 592 U .S . Value, to - 9th June B .o .S . 28, 334, 54 4 U .S . 250 Aph . Vanish, to - 18th June ; 14th July B .o .S . 25 U .S . Vanity - 23rd Sept . B .o .S . 62, 287, 360, 442, 597 U .S . 20 6 Aph . Vapour(s), vapor - 155 U .S . 20 Aph . 289 Phr . Variety - 7th, 9th Febr . ; 6th May B .o .S . 62 7 U .S . 120, 305 Aph . Various - 2nd Aug . B .o .S . 12 5 U .S . 104 Aph . Vary, to - 2nd Aug . B .o .S . Vastly - 499 U .S . Vegetable - 604 U .S . Vehicle - 3rd May B .o .S . 20 3 Aoh . Veil(s) - 14th May ; 13th June B .o .S . 576 U .S . 19, 150, 309, 327 Aph . Veil, to - 2nd May ; 10th June B .o .S . Venturer - 364 U .S . Verily - 17th March B .o .S . 72, 133, 171, 453 496, 583 U .S . 41, 347, 35 2 Aph . Verse - 3 0 U .S . Vessel - 14th Dec . B .o .S . 575 U .S . Vibrate, to - 15th Febr . B .o .S . 368 U .S . Vibrations - 10th, 14th Febr . ; 328
(cont . Vibrations) 13th Oct . B .O .S . 338, 586 U .S . 251 Aph . Vice(s) - 7th Sept . B .o .S . Victorious - 17th March B .O .S . Victory - 9th June B .o .S . 164 U .S . View - 18th Febr . ; 1st Dec . B .o .S . 233, 295, 452 U .S . 6, 90, 103, 351 Aph . View, point of - 8th July B .o .S . 83, 434 U .S . Vigorous - 353 Phr . Viladat Day - 118 U .S . Virtue(s) - 13th Jan . ; 2n d Febr . ; 18th March ; 17th May ; 22nd July ; 7th Sept . ; 8th Oct . B .O .S . 25, 51, 253, 385, 407, 422 , 612 U .S . 100, 165, 193, 206, 210 , 322 Aph . Visage 137 U .S . Vision(s) - 15th March ; 10th April ; 7th June ; 1st, 27th July ; 16th Oct . B .o .S . 151, 240, 313, 531, 653 U .S . 46, 169 Aph . 92, 130, 186 - 189, 252 , 261, 295, 298 Phr . Visit, to - 84 Aph . Visitor - 111 U .S . Visualize, to - 585 U .S . Vocation - 26th June B .o .S . Voice - 7th May B .o .S . 356 U .S . 43, 273, 301 Aph . 151, 152 Phr . Voice, to - 196 U .S . Void - 171, 277 Aph . Vow 241 U .S .
Wage(s) - 315 U .S . Wagner 586 U .S . Wahabo - 331 Phr . Wait, to - 134, 382, 626 U .S . Wakeful 93 U .S . Waken, to - 303 Aph . 76 Phr . Waker 310 U .S . Waking 609 U .S . Walk, to - 15th Sept . ; 7t h Nov . ; 15th Dec . B .o .S . 381, 559 U .S . Wall(s) - 13th May ; 1st Nov . B .o .S . 395, 500 U .S . 44 Aph . Want 360a U .S .
32 9 Want, to - 19th Febr . ; 13th April ; 1st May ; 29th Oct . ;
26th Dec . B .o .S . 53, 212, 239, 273, 299 , 339, 412 U .S . 47 Phr . War - 60, 338a U .S . Warfare - 190 Aph . Warm-hearted - 93 Aph . Warmth - 23rd July B .o .S . Warn, to - 153 Aph . Warner 513 U .S . Wash away, to - 73, 349 Aph . Waste - 23rd Febr . B .o .S . 562 U .S . Watchfulness - 15th, 23r d July B .o .S . Watchword - 290 Aph . Water(s) - 1st Jan . ; 15th ,
30th Sept . ; 8th Oct . ; 2nd , 16th Nov . ; 16th, 25th Dec . B .o .S . 73, 289, 304, 370, 381 , 440, 444, 559 U .S . 97, 104, 132, 187, 233 Aph . Waterlily - 31 U .S . Wave(s) - 17th, 19th April ; 21st Nov . ; 16th, 27th Dec . B .o .S . 77, 138, 514 U .S . 73 Aph . Wax - 4th Oct . B .o .S . Way(s) - 18th March ; 11t h April ; 12th June ; 11th Aug . ; 4th, 13th, 30th Sept . ; 16t h Nov . ; 2nd, 23rd Dec . B .o .S . 33, 35a, 42, 47, 66, 84, 99 ,
165, 180, 215, 363, 365 , 374, 500, 512, 629, 645 U .S 81, 99, 236, 289, 343 Aph 6, 14, 19, 22, 23, 27 - 29 , 33, 41, 42, 51, 73, 75, 87, 110, 229, 251, 267, 269 , 274, 276, 284, 318 Phr Weakness - 19th Febr . ; 15t h Sept . B .o 52 U .S Weakwilled - 332 U .S Wealth - 1st May B .O 34, 504 U .S 334 Aph Weapon(s) - 208 U .S Wear and tear - 381 U .S Weary 429 U .S weave, to - 39, 296 Aph Web - 39, 296 Aph Weep, to - 19 U .S Weigh, to - 191 U .S 345 Aph Weight - 96, 265, 366 U .S Welbeing - 237 Phr
. .
. .S . . . .S . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Welcome 11 U .S . Welcome, to - 138 U .S . Welfare - 237 Phr . Well (ad .) - 162, 231, 451 , 477, 599, 645 U .S . 11, 159, 185, 357 Phr . West 367 U .S . 121 Aph . Western - 275, 382, 383, 524 U .S . Wet 170 U .S . What - 305 - 308, 337, 359 , 371, 372, 375, 491, 506 , 599, 655 U .S . 173, 257, 322, 335, 349 Aph . Whatever - 30th March ; 5th July ; 19th Oct . ; 10th, 18th Nov . ; 12th Dec . B .O .S . 197, 227, 299, 371, 511 , 586 U .S . 146 Aph . When - 161, 233, 273, 320 , 594 U .S . 211 Aph . Whenever - 21st March ; 6t h Nov . S .o .S . Where - 24th April B .o .S . 148, 154, 297, 302, 360 , 616, 640 U .S . 181 Anh . Wherever - 143 U .S . Whichever - 374 U .S . While - 2nd, 16th Dec . B .o .S . 53, 58, 121, 227, 351 U .S . 54 Aph . Whip(s) - 442 U .S . Whisper - 301 Aph . Whisper, to - 274 U .S . Whispering - 368 U .S . White 641 U .S . 218 Aph . Who - 288, 469 U .S . Whole - 26th Jan . ; 21st May ; 11th, 25th June ; 3rd July ; 7th, 21st Aug . ; 9th, 16th Oct . ; 21st Nov . B .o .S . 132, 204, 240, 368, 375 , 452, 453, 466, 477, 485 , 532, 604, 626, 649 U .S . 46, 57, 68, 73, 78, 82 , 127, 144, 155, 159, 185, 194, 204, 253, 262, 278 , 285, 311, 323, 327, 329 Aph . 67, 99, 137 Phr . Wholeheartedly - 30 Phr . Why - 10, 210, 266, 301, 343 , 358, 432, 471, 626, 630 , 644 U .S . Wicked - 5, 35a U .S . 17 Aph . 329
33 0 Wickedness - 574 Wide(ly) - 1st Dec . 4, 114, 169, 230, 280, 330 Wide-awake - 32, 84 Width - 217
169 Wife - 193 Wilderness - 397 Will - 12th, 21st, 22nd, 23rd Jan . ; 18th April ; 4th Dec . 77, 299, 456, 511 27 97, 158 Willingly - 28th Nov . 193 Willingness - 100, 193 Will power - 13th, 21st Sept . 655 Win, to - 25th Febr . ; 22nd Dec . Wind - 10, 24, 138, 227, 370 Wine - 12th May 24, 63, 230, 237, 285 287 Wing(s) - 29th Aug . 161, 356 5 259 Wisdom - 12th, 13th Febr . ; 14th May ; 10th June ; 20th Aug . ; 6th Oct . ; 15th Nov . ; 8th Dec . 63, 138, 139, 258, 299, 461, 467, 577, 586 47, 48, 58, 93 15, 36, 72, 105, 164, 229, 232, 236, 237, 243, 244, 250, 266 Wise(ly) - 21st Jan . ; 7th Febr . ; 20th March ; 19th May ; 4th, 5th, 8th, 9th July ; 7th Aug . ; 29th Sept . ; 12th Oct . ; 7th Nov . ; 4th, 16th, 23rd Dec . 4, 33, 47, 58, 95, 121, 137, 172, 191, 226, 254, 286, 296, 298, 332, 353, 369, 613 93, 142, 174 Wish - 1st June 56 136 Wish, to - 16th Jan . ; 29th Oct . 8, 79, 165, 182, 212, 392, 393, 452, 514, 518, 608 Witch - 13, 14 Withdraw, to - 77, 232 Withdrawal - 77 330
U .S . B .o .S . Aph . Aph . U .S .
Aph . U .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S . Aph . Phr . B .o .S . Aoh . Aph . 3 .o .S . U .S . B .o .S . U .S .
B .O .S . U .S . Aph .
B .O .S . U .S . Aph . Phr .
B .o .S . U .S . Aoh .
Phr .
B .o .S .
U .S . Aph .
B .O .S . U .S . Aph .
B .O .S . U .S . U .S . U .S . U .S .
Within - 15th Jan . ; 12th March ; 10th Anril ; 14t h May ; 27th, 29th, 30th June ; 2nd, 14th, 16th, 18th July ; B .o .S . 24th Oct . ; 24th Nov .
240,
288, 379, 385, 415 ,
444, 492, 492b, 582, 626 U .S . 30, 49, 78, 81, 84, 188 , 190, 202, 239, 273, 279 , 305, 350 Aph . 34, 66 Phr . Withou t - 3rd Jan . ; 5th, 11th Febr . ; 31st March ; 23rd Apri l ; 13th July ; 3rd, 4th , B .o .S . 26th Dec . 20, 30, 54, 152, 185, 240 , 255, 289, 315, 346, 379 , 439, 492b, 507, 512, 549 , 597, 635 U .S . 23, 78, 81, 84, 92, 160 , 164, 179, 188, 191, 202 , 302, 305, 350 Aph . 34, 66, 141, 205 Phr . Withst and, to - 313 Phr . Woman - 21, 83, 148, 161 , 251, 387, 398 - 400 U .S . Womb - 139, 401 U .S . Wonder , to - 567 U .S . Wonder ful - 82 Aph . Wood - 22nd Nov . B .O .S . 373, 427, 514, 581, 606 U .S . 2 Aph . Word(s ) - 6th, 26th Jan . ; 16th April ; 7th May ; 2n d June ; 16th July ; 9th, 16th , 21st Aug . ; 31st Oct . ; 13th , 14th , 15th Nov . B .o .S . 32, 75, 108, 111, 112, 169 , 191, 196, 356, 370, 389 , 436, 486, 531, 585, 589 , 641, 645, 651, 658 U .S . 76, 115, 149, 150, 173 , 257, 266, 287, 302, 304 Aph . 141, 153, 154, 321, 334 , 337 Phr . Work(s ) - 19th Oct . B .O .S . 188, 275, 334, 371, 435 , 451, 513, 546, 558, 570 , 634 U .S . 58, 118, 174, 259, 262 , 277 Aph . 148 Phr . Work, to - 24th Aug . B .o .S . 5, 5 0, 116, 152, 283, 334 , 451, 512, 513, 518, 546 , 553, 555, 561, 572, 579 , 608 U .S . 64, 146 Aph .
33 1
Worker(s) - 93, 637 Working - 532
U .S . U .S .
U .S . Workman - 373 World(s) - 16th, 27th Jan . ; 9th, 18th Febr . ; 5th, 21st, 30th May ; 6th, 29th June ; 2nd, 15th July ; 21st Aug . ; 15th Sept . ; 23rd, 24th Nov . B .o .S . 21, 35, 50, 69, 132, 161, 230, 232, 254, 273, 283, 338, 374 - 379, 381, 424, 429, 452, 466, 474, 477, 488, 500, 502, 504, 566, 602, 604, 608, 621, 624, U .S . 631 14, 21, 39, 41, 43, 54, 70,
78, 92, 98, 122, 123, 154, 155, 158, 171, 190, 200, 236, 258, 279, 288, 291, 292, 296 1
Aph . Phr .
Worrldly 9 - 35 3 99,
U .S . Aph .
Worm(s) - 604
U .S .
Worry(ies) - 342 18, 300
Aph . Phr .
Worry, to - 11th July 271, 432, 478, 540
B .o .S . U .S .
185 worse, worst - 29th Jan . 175, 176, 213, 236, 334 ,
Ya Habib - 244 Ya Hadi - 204
Phr . Phr .
Ya Kafi - 334 Phr . Ya Quadir - 168, 249 Phr . Ya Sabir - 235 Phr . Ya Shafi - 334 Phr . Ya Wahabo - 331 Phr . Yaveh - 227 U .S . Years - 118, 622 U .S . Yellow - 659 U .S . Yes - 97, 153 U .S . Yet - 29th April ; 4th, 14t h May ; 13th, 15th Sept . ; 21s t Nov . B .o .S . 47, 137, 170, 323, 381 , 449, 488, 520, 616, 651 U .S .
234, 236, 319 You(r) - 27th Nov .
Aph . B .o .S .
85, 114, 115, 299, 423 , 424, 570, 626 Young - 381
U .S . U .S .
Youth - 26, 148
U .S .
Phr . B .o .S .
355, 389, 567, 574, 588 , 644
U .S .
96
Aph .
Worship - 27th April ; 22nd , 23rd Oct . 173 Worship, to - 11th April 242, 245, 334, 535 11 Worshipper - 13th Aug .
381, 487, 498, 637
S .o .S . Aph .
B .O .S . U .S . Aph . B .o .S .
U .S .
Aph . 316 Worthwhile - 29th Febr . ; 9t h B .o .S . April Worthy - 334, 545 U .S . Phr . 114, 115 B .o .S . Wound, to - 16th July Aoh . Wrap, to - 150 U .S . Wrath - 452 U .S . Wrist - 102 U .S . Write, to - 531 Aph . 271, 338 B .o .S . wrong - 24th May 85, 89, 332, 347, 363, 380 , U .S . 441, 519, 567, 568, 590 Aph . 78, 201, 322 B .o .S . Wrongdoing - 18th Aug .
331